These are my notes from the Nordic Nutrition Conference 2020, arranged online, December 14-16 2020.

My poster

Return to home.


Review sessions

R2: Modern methods for dietary analysis

1. Use of loyalty-card data in assessment of food consumption in the population

Jaakko Nevalainen, Tampere University, Finland

  • Customer loyalty cards
    • register all purchases per card holder
    • Large participant numbers with long followup
    • Avoid recall bias, but collects data on purchases, not consumption

2. Improving the accuracy of dietary intake assessment: From cameras to molecules

Gary Frost, London Imperial College, UK

  • Dietary assessment is notoriously imprecise
  • Camera technology is being developed to recognize and quantify food intake

R3: Vitamin D – requirements and public health policies in debate

1. Does vitamin D have a role in the prevention of non-skeletal diseases?

Lars Rejnmark, Aarhus University, Denmark

  • Observational studies have consistently reported associations between low plasma 25(OH)D and non-skeletal outcomes
  • Few studies have investigated the effect of increasing plasma 25(OH)D
  • Vitamin D and muscle strength and function
    • Several RCT’s retracted for scientific fraud (Sato et al)
    • Several studies not placebo controlled

My question:

  • In many RCT’s of vitamin D supplementation, the participants are allowed to supplement outside the study treatment, resulting in considerable vitamin D intakes also in the control group, which of course may dilute any real effect. How did you take this into account when reviewing the literature? Do you think that this (potentially misleading) message of “no effect” from RCT’s may convince people who could actually benefit from supplementation to refrain from it?
    • Vitamin D is very hard to study, because you can take supplements without knowing it, get it from the sun etc.

2. Different vitamin D policies in the Nordic countries – effects on vitamin D intake and status

Suvi Itkonen, University of Helsinki, Finland

3. Ethnic groups and vitamin D: a common challenge in the Nordic countries?

Ahmed Ali Madar, University of Oslo, Norway

  • Cultural habits such as wearing a veil, as well as darker skin, contribute to low vitamin D status among some ethnic groups in the Nordic countries

R4: Quality of fat – beyond cardiovascular benefits

1. Brown fat – an update

Kirsi Virtanen, University of Eastern Finland and University of Turku, Finland

2. Diet and liver fat

Ulf Risérus, Uppsala, Sweden

3. Glucose metabolism and low-grade inflammation

Maria Lankinen, University of Eastern Finland, Finland


R5: Gut in the perspective

1. IBS – what is the best treatment?

Magnus Simrén, University of Gothenburg, Sweden

  • Reassure the patients and give a confident diagnosis, we do not cure IBS

2. Gluten sensitivity

Juha Taavela, Tampere University, Finland


R6: Prevention of type 2 diabetes: what did we learn from the DPS and PREVIEW projects?

1. Dietary regulation of glucose metabolism – implication for prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes

Michael Lean, University of Glasgow, UK

2. DPS

Jaana Lindström, Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland

3. PREVIEW

Anne Raben, University of Copenhagen, Denmark


R9: New Nordic Nutrition Recommendations – towards 2022

3. Integration of sustainability into NNR

Helle Margrete Meltzer, University of Oslo, Norway, and Ellen Trolle, DTU, Denmark (20 min)

  • Operationalization of diet sustainability, 4 domains
    • Health and nutrition (nutrient content, diet quality)
    • Environment: protective of the environment (greenhouse gas emission etc)
    • Culture: culturally acceptible, considering common diet and willingness to change
    • Economy: accessible and affordable (food budget, fair price for producers, etc)
  • It should be clear what part of the recommendations are based on health, environmental sustainability, or other indicators

4. Discussion and feedback


R12: Diet and the UN Sustainability development Goals

1. Food and environmental sustainability – challenges in impact assessment

Hanna Tuomisto, University of Helsinki, Finland

  • Carbon footprint is depending on several different domains
    • Land use
    • Transport
    • Processing
    • Livestock
  • Unit of analysis impact the conclusions
    • Per kg
    • Per protein
    • Per kcal
    • Per unit of specific nutrients
  • Life-cycle assessments cannot be compared directly unless the methodologies align

2. Sustainable future and global policies for food and diet

Marco Springmann, University of Oxford, UK

  • When we eat above what can be considered sustainable globally, we offload the responsibility to others to eat less.
  • Previously, when people had less money, they ate less. Now, with a large supply of cheap, energy dense foods, those with less money eat less.

3. Equity and diet: women, men or other risk groups?

Gun Roos, National Institute for Consumer Research, Norway

  • Gender
    • Men report more meat and potatoes.
    • Women report more fruits and berries, vegetables, pulses, nuts and seeds
  • Socioeconomic background
    • Those with higher education report eating more vegetable, fruit, whole-grains
    • Lower education associated with higher intakes of soft drinks
  • Ethnic groups
    • The population is becoming more diverse

Plenary sessions

P1: How to achieve healthy diets for all – a global perspective

Corinna Hawkes, University of London, UK

  • All income groups eat too little vegetables, whole-grains and legumes, and too much red meat
  • To improve diet, we need to work step by step to replace foods that offer little nutrition with foods that do
  • Food systems need to be reoriented toward healthier diets, in a coherent way

P3: Public Health Nutrition – scientific insight and solutions for the next 20 years

Adam Drewnowski, University of Washington, USA

  • A hybrid mode combining in-person and remote teaching will probably remain
  • Education has a bigger impact on what we eat than income

Oral and poster presentations

125 Association between milk consumption and mortality in a Swedish cohort

Emily Sonested, Lund University, Sweden

  • Higher intakes of non-fermented milk was associated with higher mortality risk, while inverse associations were observed with fermented milk.
  • Participants with genes indicating lactose intolerance (and subsequent lower milk intakes), had lower mortality risk.

149: Effects of Dietary Carbohydrates on Plasma Saturated Fatty Acids: a Randomized Controlled Feeding Study

Mohammed Bajahzer, Uppsala University, Sweden

  • Carbohydrate quantity and quality may influence plasma lipids originating from de novo lipogenesis
  • Lowcarbohydrate vs high carbohydrate/high fibre vs high carbohydrate/high sugar
    • No major effect on circulating palmitate
    • Higher myristate with high sugar
    • Lower palmitoleate after low-carb

168: High cholesterol levels in young adults in Norway

Lena Leder, Mills, Norway

  • A high proportion in the young age groups have elevated plasma cholesterol
  • Elevated cholesterol is asymptomatic, and is therefore not necessarily found
  • There is a need for testing before the currently recommendations of testing at ages > 40 years

290: Discourses on successful weight maintenance

Anu Joki, University of Helsinki, Finland

  • Lifelong weight maintainers focus more on lifestyle factors, while weight-loss weight maintainers focus more on control and external causes.
    • External causes are mostly used to explain weight gain or lack of weight loss.
    • Control is mostly used to explain successful weight loss/management.
    • Life-long weight maintainers experience their weight management as a natural part of their lifestyle (being physically active etc)