Key findings of the French BioNutriNet project on organic food-based diets: description, determinants, and relationships to health and the environment

Archive ouverte

Kesse-Guyot, Emmanuelle | Lairon, Denis | Allès, Benjamin | Seconda, Louise | Rebouillat, Pauline | Brunin, Joséphine | Vidal, Rodolphe | Taupier-Letage, Bruno | Galan, Pilar | Amiot, Marie-Josephe | Péneau, Sandrine | Touvier, Mathilde | Boizot-Szantai, Christine | Ducros, Véronique | Soler, Louis-Georges | Cravedi, Jean Pierre | Debrauwer, Laurent | Hercberg, Serge | Langevin, Brigitte | Pointereau, Philippe | Baudry, Julia

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press -

International audience. Few studies have investigated the relationships between organic food consumption, dietary patterns, monetary diet cost, health, and the environment. To address these issues, a consortium of French epidemiologists, nutritionists, economists, and toxicologists launched the BioNutriNet project in 2013. In 2014, an FFQ documented the usual organic and nonorganic (conventional) food consumption of approximately 35,000 NutriNet-Santé participants. Then, individual organic and conventional food intakes were merged with price, environmental, and pesticide residue data sets, which distinguished between conventional and organic farming methods. Many studies were conducted to characterize organic consumers and their environmental impacts (i.e., greenhouse gas emissions, energy demand, and land use) and organic food consumption impacts on health. We observed that organic consumers had diets that were healthier and richer in plant-based food than nonorganic consumers. Their diets were associated with higher monetary costs, lower environmental impacts, and reduced exposure to certain pesticide residues. Regular consumption of organic food was associated with reduced risks of obesity, type 2 diabetes, postmenopausal breast cancer, and lymphoma. Although several observations have been confirmed by several studies conducted in other countries, our results should be replicated in other cultural settings and coupled with experimental studies to be able to draw causal conclusions. Finally, the main finding of the BioNutriNet project is that while organic food consumption could be associated with positive externalities on human health and the environment, organic-based diets should be accompanied by dietary shifts toward plant-based diets to allow for better planetary and human health.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Improvement of diet sustainability with increased level of organic food in the diet: findings from the BioNutriNet cohort

Archive ouverte | Baudry, Julia | CCSD

International audience. Background: Organic food consumption has steadily increased over the past decade in westernized countries. Objective:We aimed, based on observational data, to compare some sustainability feat...

Comparing nutritional, economic, and environmental performances of diets according to their levels of greenhouse gas emissions

Archive ouverte | Seconda, Louise | CCSD

International audience. In response to climate change, reduction of GHGEs (greenhouse gas emissions) from food systems is required. Shifts of agricultural practices and dietary patterns could reduce GHGEs. We aimed ...

Estimated dietary pesticide exposure from plant-based foods using NMF-derived profiles in a large sample of French adults

Archive ouverte | Rebouillat, Pauline | CCSD

International audience. Purpose: This study, conducted in participants of the NutriNet-Santé cohort, aims to identify dietary pesticide exposure profiles (derived from Non-negative Matrix Factorization) from convent...

Chargement des enrichissements...