Healthy Eating Programs a Good Investment

By Petrina Smith
Monday, 31 March, 2014

Individuals with a higher socioeconomic status usually follow a healthy eating program and take better care of their health needs, while those on lower incomes are more likely to cut back on basic needs, according to recent research.


Researchers from Monash University, the National Defense Medical Centre, Taiwan, and the National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan, found that although men and women aged over 65 years who ate healthily had shorter stays in hospital, they were strong users of other medical services. In fact, they tended to make greater use of outpatient services, preventive care and dental care than those who did not follow a healthy eating regime.


Emeritus Professor Mark Wahlqvist from Monash University’s Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine and the Monash Asia Institute said a diverse diet can be quite costly, which can lead to food insecurity for low socioeconomic groups who cannot afford it. “This may partly explain the greater expenditure on acute care that they incur,” he said


Professor Walhlqvist said that economic factors played an inescapable role in the development of health policies, but the medical costs of diet-related and nutritionally related diseases were rarely given attention.


“There is a need for health services to develop a nutrition policy for nutritionally disadvantaged groups,” Professor Wahlqvist said.“Healthy eating doesn’t mean lower overall medical costs, but does mean that what is spent represents a better health investment.”


The findings have important implications for nutrition-related health service policy given that most countries are facing increased medical expenditure as their population ages.


“Such a policy should pay close attention to socially disadvantaged groups with poorer dietary quality,” Professor Wahlqvist said

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