Nutrients (Apr 2021)

Persistent Moderate-to-Weak Mediterranean Diet Adherence and Low Scoring for Plant-Based Foods across Several Southern European Countries: Are We Overlooking the Mediterranean Diet Recommendations?

  • Stefano Quarta,
  • Marika Massaro,
  • Mihail Chervenkov,
  • Teodora Ivanova,
  • Dessislava Dimitrova,
  • Rui Jorge,
  • Vanda Andrade,
  • Elena Philippou,
  • Constantinos Zisimou,
  • Viktorija Maksimova,
  • Katarina Smilkov,
  • Darinka Gjorgieva Ackova,
  • Lence Miloseva,
  • Tatjana Ruskovska,
  • Georgia Eirini Deligiannidou,
  • Christos A. Kontogiorgis,
  • Julio Sánchez-Meca,
  • Paula Pinto,
  • María-Teresa García-Conesa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13051432
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 1432

Abstract

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The Mediterranean diet (MD) has been sponsored worldwide as a healthy and sustainable diet. Our aim was to update and compare MD adherence and food choices across several Southern European countries: Spain (SP), Portugal (PT), Italy (IT), Greece (GR), and Cyprus (CY) (MED, Mediterranean), and Bulgaria (BG) and the Republic of North Macedonia (NMK) (non-MED, non-Mediterranean). Participants (N = 3145, ≥18 y) completed a survey (MeDiWeB) with sociodemographic, anthropometric, and food questions (14-item Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener, 14-MEDAS). The MED and non-MED populations showed moderate (7.08 ± 1.96) and weak (5.58 ± 1.82) MD adherence, respectively, with significant yet small differences across countries (SP > PT > GR > IT > CY > BG > NMK, p-value p-value < 0.001), but differences were rather small. Our results suggest that the campaigns carried out to support and reinforce the MD and to promote plant-based foods have limited success across Southern Europe, and that more hard-hitting strategies are needed.

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