Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines
Food production is affected by climate change, and, in turn, food production is responsible for 20-30% of greenhouse gases. The food system must increase output as the population increases and must meet nutrition and health needs while simultaneously assisting in achieving the Sustainable Developmen...
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my.um.eprints.263082022-02-21T06:31:57Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/26308/ Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines Binns, Colin W. Lee, Mi Kyung Maycock, Bruce Torheim, Liv Elin Nanishi, Keiko Duong, Doan Thi Thuy Q Science (General) Food production is affected by climate change, and, in turn, food production is responsible for 20-30% of greenhouse gases. The food system must increase output as the population increases and must meet nutrition and health needs while simultaneously assisting in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Good nutrition is important for combatting infection, reducing child mortality, and controlling obesity and chronic disease throughout the life course. Dietary guidelines provide advice for a healthy diet, and the main principles are now well established and compatible with sustainable development. Climate change will have a significant effect on food supply; however, with political commitment and substantial investment, projected improvements will be sufficient to provide food for the healthy diets needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Some changes will need to be made to food production, nutrient content will need monitoring, and more equitable distribution is required to meet the dietary guidelines. Increased breastfeeding rates will improve infant and adult health while helping to reduce greenhouse gases. 2021 Article PeerReviewed Binns, Colin W. and Lee, Mi Kyung and Maycock, Bruce and Torheim, Liv Elin and Nanishi, Keiko and Duong, Doan Thi Thuy (2021) Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines. Annual Review of Public Health, 42 (1). pp. 233-255. ISSN 0163-7525, DOI https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-012420-105044 <https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-012420-105044>. https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-012420-105044 doi:10.1146/annurev-publhealth-012420-105044 |
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Q Science (General) Binns, Colin W. Lee, Mi Kyung Maycock, Bruce Torheim, Liv Elin Nanishi, Keiko Duong, Doan Thi Thuy Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
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Food production is affected by climate change, and, in turn, food production is responsible for 20-30% of greenhouse gases. The food system must increase output as the population increases and must meet nutrition and health needs while simultaneously assisting in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Good nutrition is important for combatting infection, reducing child mortality, and controlling obesity and chronic disease throughout the life course. Dietary guidelines provide advice for a healthy diet, and the main principles are now well established and compatible with sustainable development. Climate change will have a significant effect on food supply; however, with political commitment and substantial investment, projected improvements will be sufficient to provide food for the healthy diets needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. Some changes will need to be made to food production, nutrient content will need monitoring, and more equitable distribution is required to meet the dietary guidelines. Increased breastfeeding rates will improve infant and adult health while helping to reduce greenhouse gases. |
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Article |
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Binns, Colin W. Lee, Mi Kyung Maycock, Bruce Torheim, Liv Elin Nanishi, Keiko Duong, Doan Thi Thuy |
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Binns, Colin W. Lee, Mi Kyung Maycock, Bruce Torheim, Liv Elin Nanishi, Keiko Duong, Doan Thi Thuy |
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Binns, Colin W. |
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Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
title_short |
Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
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Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
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Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
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Climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
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climate change, food supply, and dietary guidelines |
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2021 |
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http://eprints.um.edu.my/26308/ https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-publhealth-012420-105044 |
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