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Depression

Why Are Vegetarians More Likely to Be Depressed?

Research finds a surprising link between diet and depression.

Key points

  • A meta-analysis on depression in vegetarians and non-vegetarians found that on average, vegetarians had a more depressed mood.
  • Data from 49,889 participants (8,057 vegetarians and 41,832 non-vegetarians) was included in the study.
  • It is not possible to determine whether depressive mood leads to a higher probability of becoming a vegetarian.
  • Results from previous longitudinal studies, however, indicate that mental health issues like anxiety and depression precede dietary changes.
Drazen Zigic/Shutterstock
Source: Drazen Zigic/Shutterstock

There is a complex relationship between our mental health and what we eat. On the one hand, certain diets appear to increase the risk of developing a mental disorder. On the other hand, suffering from a mental disorder could lead to eating more or eating less, or eating different kinds of foods.

One particularly mysterious association is that between depression and being a vegetarian. While some studies showed that vegetarians are more depressed than meat-eaters, others showed the exact opposite.

A New Meta-Analysis on Vegetarianism and Depressed Mood

To unravel this mystery, a German research team (which I am a part of) conducted a new meta-analysis on vegetarian diet and depression that has now been published in the Journal of Affective Disorders (Ocklenburg & Borawski, 2021). A meta-analysis is a form of statistical analysis that integrates the results of many different scientific studies. It has the advantage of a larger sample size, increasing statistical power, and rendering the analysis less likely to be affected by characteristics of individual studies.

In the meta-analysis, data on individual scores in depression questionnaires from 13 different empirical studies that compared vegetarians and non-vegetarians were included. Overall, data from 49,889 participants (8,057 vegetarians and 41,832 non-vegetarians) were included in the analysis, making this a large and statistically robust analysis.

What Were the Results of the Study?

The meta-analysis revealed a statistically significant difference between vegetarians and non-vegetarians, with vegetarians showing higher depression scores than non-vegetarians. Thus, vegetarians, on average, showed a more depressed mood than meat-eaters. But correlation is not causation—and from the association observed in the meta-analysis, it is not possible to determine whether depressive mood leads to a higher probability of becoming a vegetarian, or whether being vegetarian increases the chances of experiencing depressive episodes.

However, the results of a previous longitudinal study on vegetarian diet and depression, anxiety, and somatoform disorders suggest that depressive mood may come first (Michalak et al., 2012). In this study, it was shown that many people started to follow a vegetarian diet only after they got a diagnosis for a mental disorder, not the other way around.

Thus, a vegetarian diet may not lead to depression at all. Instead, it may be more likely that people become vegetarian after developing mental health issues. Michalak and co-authors (2012) suggested three possible reasons for this behavior:

  1. Individuals with mental health issues may change their diet to positively influence their mental health via a healthier lifestyle.
  2. Individuals with mental health issues like depression may be more sensitive to the suffering of other beings, including animals. This increased empathy for animal suffering may cause them to stop eating meat.
  3. Individuals with mental health issues may be more anxious about their health in general; a vegetarian diet is often perceived as being healthier than eating meat.

Facebook/LinkedIn image: Drazen Zigic/Shutterstock

References

Michalak J, Zhang XC, Jacobi F. (2012). Vegetarian diet and mental disorders: results from a representative community survey. Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act, 9, 67.

Ocklenburg S & Borawski J (2021). Vegetarian diet and depression scores: A meta-analysis, J Affect Disord, 294, 813-815.

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