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Journal article

Perspective: Why Whole Grains Should Be Incorporated into Nutrient-Profile Models to Better Capture Nutrient Density

From

University of Washington1

Tufts University2

University of Wollongong3

National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark4

Research group for Nutrition and Health Promotion, National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark5

MS-Nutrition6

General Mills, Inc.7

Cereal Partners Worldwide8

Newcastle University9

Healthy eating patterns, as described by dietary guidelines, typically favor whole grains, low-fat dairy, vegetables, fruit, legumes, and nuts and seeds. Nutrient-profiling (NP) models capture nutrient density of individual foods and can inform healthier food choices. Although whole grains are prominently featured in most dietary guidelines, they are not included in most NP models.

Healthy foods, as identified by most NP models, are those that contain limited amounts of energy, saturated fat, total or added sugar, and sodium. As global dietary guidance turns to foods and food groups as opposed to individual nutrients, future nutrient-density metrics may need to do the same. Potential methods to incorporate whole grains into the overall concept of nutrient density and into selected NP models are outlined in this review.

Incorporating whole grains into the Nutri-Score, Health Star Rating, or the Nutrient Rich Food index will require further analyses of dietary nutrient density in relation to health outcomes across diverse population subgroups. We present the rationale for how the inclusion of whole grains in NP models can assist in the implementation of dietary guidance.

Language: English
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2021
Pages: 600-608
ISSN: 21565376 and 21618313
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1093/advances/nmaa172
ORCIDs: Mejborn, Heddie

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