Should you adopt a plant-based diet? The health benefits are real, the nutritional risks low

Reducing the proportion of animal products on our plates is not only a public health issue, but also a nutritional challenge. But is it really possible to adopt a vegetarian diet without becoming unbalanced? A new French study, published in June 2025 in the European Journal of Nutrition, provides precise answers to this question. Using national INCA3 data, it models the impact of a plant-based diet on health and nutrient intake.

Objective: to quantify the benefits and risks of a moderate green diet

The study is not concerned with theoretical vegetarian or vegan diets, but with a actual sub-group of the French adult population (10.7 %), whose diet is the most plant-based (PB+), with over 80 % of energy and protein intake coming from plants.

The researchers compare this group with those whose diet is the least plant-based (PB-), in order to :

  • Assess the prevalence of nutritional inadequacy (excess or deficiency)
  • Estimate proven deficiencies in key nutrients
  • Quantify the modelled health benefits, in disability-adjusted life years (DALYs), if the entire population adopted the PB+ plan

Net public health benefits of a plant-based diet

Less disease, more healthy life

A switch to a vegetated regime (PB+) would avoid approximately 132,700 years of life with disability (range 125,400-140,000 DALYs).

The benefits relate to the main chronic diseases:

  • Ischaemic heart disease
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Colorectal cancer

The gain is approximately twice as high for men than in women, due to a more marked improvement in intake (more fibre, less processed meat).

Nutritional inadequacies to watch out for

Compared to PB-, people in the PB+ group have :

Less risk of insufficiency for :

  • Fibres
  • Linoleic acid (omega-6)
  • Potassium
  • Vitamin C

But more risk of insufficiency for :

  • Proteins
  • Calcium
  • Iron
  • Iodine
  • Selenium
  • Vitamins A, B6, B12
  • Riboflavin

From proven deficiencies are also more frequent for iodine and riboflavin in PB+.
Also worth noting: fewer saturated fatty acids exceeding the thresholds, but more for free sugars.

What are the nutritional factors involved?

The health benefits of the PB+ plan come from a combination of factors:

GenderMain mechanisms
WomenLess processed meat, more nuts, lower blood cholesterol
MenMore fruit, more fibre, less saturated fat

What this means for those involved in nutrition

1. The moderate plant-based diet has been scientifically validated

This food model presents significant benefits without going strictly vegan. It is adaptable, culturally acceptable, and rooted in real-life practices.

2. Plant-based formulation = nutritional vigilance

To avoid the shortcomings observed in PB+, it is crucial to :

  • Monitor the intake of vitamins B12, A, B6, iron, iodine, zinc, complete proteins
  • Enrich, strengthen or intelligently combining plant sources

3. Balancing innovation

Brands can claim to be positioned on the basis of French research :

“A sensible, scientifically validated plant-based diet that combines health benefits with nutritional safety”.”

Conclusion

The greening of food benefits public health, with a net positive impact on the main chronic diseases.
But it is not something to be taken lightly: there are nutritional deficiencies, and must guide the formulation and recommendations.

Reference

Pauline Mombert, Jean-François Huneau, Juhui Wang, Jeanne-Marie Membré, François Mariotti. Limited risks of nutrient deficiency and significant modelled health benefits of adherence to a moderate plant-based diet in French adults. European Journal of Nutrition, Vol. 64, Article 200, June 2025. DOI

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