Trends in Plant-Based Diets among United States Adults, 1999–March 2020

Dublin Core

Title

Trends in Plant-Based Diets among United States Adults, 1999–March 2020

Subject

Nutrition--Health aspects

Creator

Kristen Walker

Electronic Resource Item Type Metadata

Author(s)

Valerie K Sullivan, Eurídice Martínez-Steele, Vanessa Garcia-Larsen, Casey M Rebholz

Journal Name

The Journal of Nutrition

Volume

Vol. 154

Issue

No. 12

Publication Date

2024

Publisher

American Society for Nutrition

Document Type

Journal article

Language

English

Region

United States

Access

Open Access

Abstract

Background Interest in plant-based eating has increased alongside increased variety and availability of highly processed plant-based meat and dairy alternatives. The impact of the shifting commercial landscape and public interest in plant-based eating on dietary intake is unknown. Objectives To examine trends in the consumption and composition of plant-based diets in the United States adults. Methods Serial cross-sectional data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey were used to assess trends in the proportion of United States adults aged ≥20 y consuming a plant-based diet (defined as ≥50% total protein from plants on a 24-h dietary recall) from 1999–2000 to 2017–March 2020 (n = 51,698). Trends in processing level (percentage energy intake from ultraprocessed foods) and diet quality [Healthy Eating Index (HEI)-2020 scores] were assessed in the subset of adults consuming plant-based diets (n = 8327). Results The proportion of United States adults consuming plant-based diets increased from 14.4% (95% CI: 12.9%, 16.0%) to 17.2% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 15.5%, 19.1%; P = 0.005 for trend). In all survey cycles, ultraprocessed foods accounted for the majority of energy intake, and ultraprocessed food intake in plant-based diets did not significantly change over time [50.7% kcal (95% CI: 47.3%, 54.1%) in 1999–2000 compared with 52.7% kcal (95% CI: 49.7%, 55.6%) in 2017–March 2020; P for trend = 0.34]. The quality of plant-based diets, measured by HEI-2020 scores, improved from 52.1 (95% CI: 49.7, 54.6) to 55.8 (95% CI: 54.1, 57.5; P for trend <0.001). Conclusions Between 1999 and March 2020, the proportion of United States adults consuming a plant-based diet increased. Among people consuming plant-based diets, ultraprocessed foods contributed most to energy intake and there was no sustained change in intake over time. The mean diet quality was low but improved modestly.

Citation

Kristen Walker, “Trends in Plant-Based Diets among United States Adults, 1999–March 2020,” ICMGLT Digital Library, accessed June 12, 2026, https://icmglt.org/library/items/show/455.

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