Assessing the One Health (ecosystem, animal and human health) impacts of current dietary patterns based on farm-to-fork life cycle assessment in the Republic of Ireland. Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Food production and dietary patterns play a central role in the myriad interactions among human, animal, and environmental health, emphasising the need for a One Health approach, and this study aims to evaluate dietary patterns within this framework. A cross-sectional dietary survey of adults was undertaken (2021) with a sample size of 957 respondents, representative of the population of Ireland. Subsequently, a farm-to-fork life cycle assessment (LCA) was employed to assess nine human health and environmental impacts (fine particulate matter formation, freshwater and marine ecotoxicity and eutrophication, human carcinogenic and non-carcinogenic toxicity and terrestrial acidification and ecotoxicity) across thirteen distinct dietary patterns: total population, rural, urban, omnivore, flexitarian, pescatarian, vegetarian, vegan, 'meat-focused', 'dairy/ovo-focused', 'vegetable-focused', 'seafood-focused', and 'potato-focused', employing the daily weight of consumed food (g/per capita/day) as the functional unit. Results indicate the 'meat-focused' diet exhibited the highest impact for fine particulate matter formation (8.00 × 10-3 kg PM2.5 eq person-1 day-1), marine eutrophication (6.60 × 10-3 kg N eq person-1 day-1), and terrestrial acidification (0.054 kg SO2 eq person-1 day-1). The 'seafood-focused' diet had the highest impact on freshwater (0.056 kg 1,4-DCB person-1 day-1) and marine ecotoxicity (0.069 kg 1,4-DCB person-1 day-1), freshwater eutrophication (8.36 × 10-4 kg P eq person-1 day-1), and human carcinogenic toxicity (0.144 kg 1,4-DCB person-1 day-1). In comparison, the 'potato-focused' diet exhibited the highest human non-carcinogenic (6.87 kg 1,4-DCB person-1 day-1) and terrestrial ecotoxicity (2.01 kg 1,4-DCB person-1 day-1). Transitioning from the "mean" diet to a vegan diet showed the highest percent decrease across all nine impacts (60.4 % - 107.3 %), followed by the 'vegetable-focused' diet (28.5 % - 66.2 %). Findings indicate adopting sustainable diets-'vegetable-focused', vegetarian, and vegan-can improve human, environmental, and animal health; however, trade-offs should be considered. Effective consumer communication and policies can enhance awareness of the interconnectedness of diets within the One Health framework, supporting both environmental and health goals.

authors

publication date

  • May 1, 2025