Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49062
Title: Nutritional medicine as mainstream in psychiatry
Authors: Sarris, Jerome
Logan, Alan C.
Akbaraly, Tasnime N.
Amminger, G. Paul
Balanzá-Martínez, Vicent
Freeman, Marlene P.
Hibbeln, Joseph
Matsuoka, Yutaka
Mischoulon, David
Mizoue, Tetsuya
Nanri, Akiko
Nishi, Daisuke
Ramsey, Drew
Rucklidge, Julia J.
Sanchez-Villegas, Almudena 
Scholey, Andrew
Su, Kuan Pin
Jacka, Felice N.
UNESCO Clasification: 32 Ciencias médicas
3206 Ciencias de la nutrición
3211 Psiquiatría
Keywords: S-Adenosyl Methionine
Dutch-Hunger-Winter
Dietary Patterns
Mental-Health
Prenatal Exposure, et al
Issue Date: 2015
Journal: The Lancet Psychiatry 
Abstract: Psychiatry is at an important juncture, with the current pharmacologically focused model having achieved modest benefits in addressing the burden of poor mental health worldwide. Although the determinants of mental health are complex, the emerging and compelling evidence for nutrition as a crucial factor in the high prevalence and incidence of mental disorders suggests that diet is as important to psychiatry as it is to cardiology, endocrinology, and gastroenterology. Evidence is steadily growing for the relation between dietary quality (and potential nutritional deficiencies) and mental health, and for the select use of nutrient-based supplements to address deficiencies, or as monotherapies or augmentation therapies. We present a viewpoint from an international collaboration of academics (members of the International Society for Nutritional Psychiatry Research), in which we provide a context and overview of the current evidence in this emerging field of research, and discuss the future direction. We advocate recognition of diet and nutrition as central determinants of both physical and mental health.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/49062
ISSN: 2215-0366
DOI: 10.1016/S2215-0366(14)00051-0
Source: The Lancet Psychiatry[ISSN 2215-0366],v. 2, p. 271-274 (Marzo 2015)
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