Dietary fat choices in Finland. Long-term trends and short-term changes, 1978–2014

Authors

  • Piia Jallinoja University of Helsinki
  • Nina Kahma University of Helsinki
  • Satu Helakorpi National Institute for Health and Welfare
  • Mari Niva University of Helsinki
  • Mikko Jauho University of Helsinki

Keywords:

fat consumption, novel products, nutrition policies, trends, population survey

Abstract

Dietary fat has long been a target of several Finnish policy sectors with conflicting interests. Changes in fat use from animal to vegetable fats have often been characterized as “a public policy success story”, in which policy interventions have led to healthier diets. The aim of this paper is to elaborate the picture of the developments in the consumption of different fat products, and to explore whether and what kind of other developments there may have been besides the general change from animal to vegetable fats. Based on population statistics between 1978 and 2014, the study shows that instead of a uniform transformation from animal to vegetable fats, there have been multiple developments simultaneously, and not all of them unambiguously agree with the "success story" discourse. The changes were related to novel fat products, health policy interventions, cultural trends, public debates on dietary fats, and fad diets.

Section
Descriptive findings

Published

2015-12-15

How to Cite

Jallinoja, P., Kahma, N., Helakorpi, S., Niva, M., & Jauho, M. (2015). Dietary fat choices in Finland. Long-term trends and short-term changes, 1978–2014. Finnish Journal of Social Research, 8, 73–77. https://doi.org/10.51815/fjsr.110740