4.7 Article

Towards a More Sustainable Nutrition: Complementary Feeding and Early Taste Experiences as a Basis for Future Food Choices

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu13082695

Keywords

sustainability; nutrition; environment; Mediterranean Diet; New Nordic Diet; complementary feeding; nutritional habits

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Health (IRCCS grant)

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The concept of sustainable nutrition considers various aspects from human health to environmental, economic and socio-cultural factors. In Europe, the Mediterranean Diet and the New Nordic Diet are examples of sustainable diets that focus on consuming plant-based, organic and minimally processed foods to reduce ecological impact. These dietary habits can be established from early stages of life, with parental role modeling playing a significant role in influencing children's diet and behaviors.
The concept of sustainable nutrition considers different fields: from human health to environmental, economic and socio-cultural aspects. Currently, in Europe, the diets that reflect the assumptions of the sustainable diet are the Mediterranean Diet and the New Nordic Diet. They both encourage the consumption of vegetable, organic and minimally processed foods, as well as regional, seasonal and Fair-Trade products, reducing the ecological impact of the production chain. These eating habits could be established starting from the prenatal period and from infancy during the complementary feeding stage, aiding children to accept of a more variable diet in terms of flavor, taste and texture. In particular, the positive parental role model is an effective method for improving a child's diet and behaviors. Two healthy plates representing a sustainable diet in early infancy, at 6 and 24 months, are here proposed, in line with the Planetary Health Diet approved by the EAT-Lancet Commission. Our work aims to highlight how a sustainable diet is possible since infancy, since the introduction of solid foods.

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