Relations (1)
related 2.32 — strongly supporting 4 facts
Vegetables and poultry are both categorized as key components of healthy dietary patterns, such as the planetary health diet [1] and the prudent pattern diet [2]. Furthermore, they are frequently compared in nutritional and environmental studies regarding their respective greenhouse gas emissions [3] and their inclusion in standardized dietary scoring systems [4].
Facts (4)
Sources
Western pattern diet - Wikipedia en.wikipedia.org 1 fact
claimThe Western pattern diet is associated with higher risks of cardiovascular disease and obesity compared to a 'prudent pattern diet,' which contains higher proportions of fruit, vegetables, whole grains, and poultry.
Health and environmental impacts of diets worldwide globalnutritionreport.org 1 fact
measurementBeef and lamb have approximately ten times the greenhouse gas emissions per serving compared to pork, poultry, and dairy products, which in turn have about ten times the emissions of plant-based foods like grains, fruits, vegetables, and legumes.
How do the indices based on the EAT-Lancet recommendations ... medrxiv.org 1 fact
referenceThe planetary health diet prioritizes the consumption of vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains, nuts, and fish, while limiting the intake of red meat and tubers, and promoting moderate consumption of eggs, poultry, and dairy products.
Dietary Guidelines and Quality - Principles of Nutritional Assessment nutritionalassessment.org 1 fact
procedureThe Mediterranean-Style Dietary Pattern Score (MSDPS) assigns points based on daily or weekly servings of specific food groups, including whole grains (8 servings/day), fruits (3 servings/day), vegetables (6 servings/day), dairy (2 servings/day), wine (1.5 servings/day for women, 3 servings/day for men), fish/seafood (6 servings/week), poultry (4 servings/week), olives/legumes/nuts (4 servings/week), potatoes/starchy roots (3 servings/week), eggs (3 servings/week), sweets (3 servings/week), and meat (1 serving/week).