Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

International food trade contributes to dietary risks and mortality at global, regional and national levels

Marco Springmann, Harry Kennard, Carole Dalin, Florian Freund

Nature Food · 2023

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Summary

Food trade is generally perceived to increase the availability and diversity of foods available to consumers, but there is little empirical evidence on its implications for human health. Here we show that a substantial proportion of dietary risks and diet-related mortality worldwide is attributable to international food trade and that whether the contributions of food trade are positive or negative depends on the types of food traded. Using bilateral trade data for 2019 and food-specific risk-disease relationships, we estimate that imports of fruits, vegetables, legumes and nuts improved dietary risks in the importing countries and were associated with a reduction in mortality from non-communicable diseases of ~1.4 million deaths globally. By contrast, imports of red meat aggravated dietar

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s43016-023-00852-4
Catalogue ID
BFmoef2vji-rarokq
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