Texarkana Gazette

Feeling down? For improved mental health, eat your greens

- MARTA ZARASKA

Feeling down? Forget your usual comfort foods. Try eating your greens instead.

Years of research underscore­s that eating more vegetables is not only good for your physical health, but it can improve mental health as well. It doesn’t take much. Even adding just one more serving of fruit or vegetables to your plate each day can improve your mood. Here are some of the recent findings.

A 2023 British study associated higher consumptio­n of fruits with feelings of relaxation, confidence and energy.

A 2022 Australian study of fruit and vegetable consumptio­n in more than 4,000 women, showed that those who consumed at least five servings of vegetables a day had 19 percent lower risk of developing depression over a period of 15 years compared with those eating a maximum of one serving. For fruits, four portions versus one meant 25 percent lower odds of depression.

A meta-analysis of 18 studies found that for every 100 grams of vegetables consumed, depression risk dropped by 3 percent.

A study of food diaries found that the benefit to mental health of eating more vegetables was equivalent to getting a job after being unemployed.

A U.K. study found that increasing one’s daily fruit and vegetable consumptio­n by just one portion provides the same estimated increase in mental well-being as eight days of 10 minute walks.

“There is definitely growing evidence that high consumptio­n of vegetables and fruits does help mental health, especially anxiety,” says Uma Naidoo, a physician and director of nutritiona­l and lifestyle psychiatry at Massachuse­tts General Hospital.

Links between fruit and vegetable consumptio­n and mental well-being have been found in countries as diverse as Ghana, India, Russia and China. What’s more, all the extra plant foods may be the reason vegetarian­s and vegans tend to be less depressed than omnivores. (While a few studies have shown worse mental health in vegetarian­s and vegans, some of them have been funded by the meat industry).

Do happy people eat vegetables or do vegetables make people happy?

It may simply be that happy people gravitate toward carrots rather than cookies. And healthy eaters could possess certain traits potentiall­y lowering their risk of depression or anxiety, but those questions typically can’t be answered in observatio­nal studies.

Now, several randomized control trials conducted in recent years offer more insights and suggest that eating greens really does make us feel good.

In 2022, Angela De Leon, a nutritiona­l biologist at Indiana University Bloomingto­n, and her colleagues, published results of a trial for which they randomized 75 people into two groups. The first group stayed on their regular diet. The second group received weekly deliveries of vegetables - carrots, squash, bell peppers and kale, among other items they chose themselves.

“We’ve eliminated some of the cited barriers to vegetable consumptio­n, which is cost, convenienc­e and availabili­ty,” De Leon said.

To make sure that the participan­ts really ate the veggies, the scientists measured blood and skin levels of carotenoid­s, which are phytochemi­cals that are a good indicator of fruit and vegetable consumptio­n.

The results showed that after just eight weeks, people from the vegetable-delivery group reported feeling considerab­ly happier than before, and happier than the members of the control group.

Other studies suggest that eating fruits and vegetables may improve mental well-being almost instantane­ously. In a 2021 study published in Psychology & Health, the more people indulged in fruits and vegetables on a certain day, the more they claimed to enjoy their experience­s the following day. This establishe­d a virtuous cycle, where the uplifting emotions led the participan­ts to treat themselves to even more healthy foods.

One reason that eating your greens may boost mental well-being, experts say, is the “substituti­on effect.” Loading up on plants may leave less room in your stomach for unhealthy foods.

“Standard American diet is called SAD for a reason,” Naidoo says. Research shows, for instance, that high consumptio­n of sweets increases the odds of feeling nervous, panicky or hopeless.

The mental health benefits may also be due to getting more fiber, which can lead to a healthier microbiome.

“The more soluble fiber we have in our diet, the more the beneficial gut microbes will thrive,” says Stephen Ilardi, psychologi­st at the University of Kansas, who researches lifestyle effects on depression.

Studies show that gut microbes are key players in depression and anxiety, as the health of your microbiome influences the production of serotonin and regulates inflammati­on, both of which play a role in mental health. “We have mountains of evidence now that gut microbes are very good at influencin­g brain function and mental function,” Ilardi said.

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