Are healthy foods automatically sustainable, too?
Perceptions about sustainability and healthy food choices are closely linked
Many people are keen on making healthy as well as sustainable food choices, and they often intuitively equate "healthy" with being "sustainable". A study by researchers at the University of Konstanz, the Johannes Kepler University Linz and the Hamburg University of Applied Sciences is focusing on whether or not this perception corresponds to reality. It has just been published in the scientific journal PLOS sustainability and Transformation.
The study shows that many consumers clearly correlate their perception of sustainability with how healthy their food choices and meals are. "We examined just how widespread the perception is that healthy meals are also sustainable. We were especially interested in whether perceptions change based on the actual overlap between meal health and sustainability. We also explored whether the type of meal, such as a vegan meal, influences this presumed correlation", explains Professor Gudrun Sproesser, head of the Department of Health Psychology at Johannes Kepler University.
In the study, over 5,000 customers rated 29 different meal options at a public canteen – i.e. the University of Konstanz’s canteen, run by Seezeit student services – as to what they believed to be a healthy and sustainable food choice. The exact values relating to environmental sustainability and healthy eating were also determined by applying a special algorithm to analyze the precise meal recipes. The findings were clear: Many participants automatically believed that healthy food was also sustainable.
Gudrun Sproesser points out: "Interestingly, however, there was no association between this perception and the actual overlap between environmental sustainability and how healthy a meal actually is." This is because healthier foods can be produced using methods that are less eco-friendly, and the reverse is also true: sustainable food can be less healthy.
Britta Renner, who leads the research team Psychological Assessment and Health Psychology at the University of Konstanz, adds: "The findings clearly indicate that we consumers need better and more readily accessible information about the sustainability and healthiness of foods." One useful approach, for example, is to use climate or sustainability labels on food, as suggested in a recent expert opinion on more sustainable food by the Scientific Advisory Board on Agricultural Policy, Food and Consumer Health Protection (WBAE) of the Federal Ministry of Food and Agriculture. Such labels would enable consumers to make more informed decisions about what they eat while simultaneously doing their part to protect the environment.
Original publication
Most read news
Original publication
Gudrun Sproesser, Ulrike Arens-Azevedo, Britta Renner; "The “healthy = sustainable” heuristic: Do meal or individual characteristics affect the association between perceived sustainability and healthiness of meals?"; PLOS Sustainability and Transformation, Volume 2, 2023-11-17
Topics
Organizations
Other news from the department science

Get the food & beverage industry in your inbox
By submitting this form you agree that LUMITOS AG will send you the newsletter(s) selected above by email. Your data will not be passed on to third parties. Your data will be stored and processed in accordance with our data protection regulations. LUMITOS may contact you by email for the purpose of advertising or market and opinion surveys. You can revoke your consent at any time without giving reasons to LUMITOS AG, Ernst-Augustin-Str. 2, 12489 Berlin, Germany or by e-mail at revoke@lumitos.com with effect for the future. In addition, each email contains a link to unsubscribe from the corresponding newsletter.
Most read news
More news from our other portals
Last viewed contents
Warmschlachtung

Pioneering cellular nutrition for healthy aging - Celltrient™ Provides Targeted Nutrition that Helps Revitalize Natural Cellular Processes related to Age-Associated Cellular Decline

Technoplan Engineering SA - Genf, Switzerland

ADM Wins 2021 BIG Innovation Award for Unique Probiotic Strain - BPL1 is a groundbreaking probiotic targeting metabolic health through body mass index (BMI) reduction with an impact on waist circumference and abdominal fat

Pernod Ricard accelerates the end of single-use plastic point-of-sale (POS) materials by 2021 - 2030 Sustainability & Responsibility roadmap

How will a COVID-19-driven downturn impact non-alcoholic spirits in the UK? - Celebrate the benefits of mindful drinking

Nutritious cell-based formula optimized for human performance replaces chicken egg - CULT Food Science portfolio company Fiction Foods launches proprietary cell-based performance scramble

New study shows light-to-moderate coffee consumption is associated with health-benefits
Schleuderkegelkolonne

Climate change is making it harder to get a good cup of coffee

Ready to launch: Master of Sustainable and Safe Food Production - On 9 February, DTU and the University of Copenhagen are launching a joint Master of Sustainable and Safe Food Production.
