Food Also Affects Your Mental Health

By Samantha Karraa

The gut-brain connection is no longer just a wellness trend — it is a measurable contributor to the global mental health crisis. And what we eat is something we can actually do something about.

I have learned to speak. I have learned to ask for support, to take my treatment without shame, and to trust that God has never let go of my hand. Today I know that recovery is slow — but it is possible. And every small step forward counts.

— Sergio, Guatemala/Mexico — living with depression and generalized anxiety

Sergio’s recovery did not happen all at once. It happened in layers — each one requiring him to look at a different dimension of his life and ask: what here needs to change? Medication was part of it. Community was part of it. Faith was part of it. And slowly, he began to understand that caring for his whole self — including his body — was not vanity or self-indulgence. It was stewardship.

The Sapien Labs Global Mind Health Report identifies ultra-processed food consumption as one of the four root causes of declining young adult mind health. This finding surprised many people who read the report — including mental health professionals who had not been tracking the nutritional research. But for those familiar with the growing science of the gut-brain connection, it was a confirmation of what the data had been quietly building toward for years.

 

What the Research Found

The Sapien Labs researchers found that across all 85 countries studied, higher consumption of ultra-processed foods — items manufactured with industrial ingredients, additives, and preservatives largely absent from traditional diets — was consistently associated with worse mind health outcomes in young adults.

15–30% The estimated contribution of ultra-processed food consumption to the mental health burden in high-consumption countries, according to the Sapien Labs analysis.

 

58% The percentage of daily caloric intake from ultra-processed foods in the average diet in the United States — the country with some of the worst young adult mind health scores globally.

 

Young adults who report frequent ultra-processed food consumption show approximately double the rates of depression and anxiety compared to those eating primarily whole, traditional foods.

The mechanism behind this connection is increasingly well understood. The human gut contains roughly 100 million neurons and produces approximately 95% of the body’s serotonin — the neurotransmitter most commonly targeted by antidepressant medications. The gut and the brain communicate constantly through the vagus nerve, in what researchers call the gut-brain axis.

When we eat food that nourishes the gut microbiome — the trillions of bacteria that live in our digestive system — we support the production of serotonin, dopamine, and other neurochemicals essential for emotional stability. When we eat food that disrupts the microbiome — through artificial additives, preservatives, excess sugar, and industrial seed oils — we undermine the very biological foundation of mental wellbeing.

In short: what we put into our bodies is not separate from what happens in our minds. They are part of the same system.

 

A Spiritual Perspective on the Body

For Christians, this connection between physical and mental health is not new theology — it is a recovery of something the church has sometimes lost. Scripture speaks consistently of the body as the temple of the Holy Spirit, as something worthy of care and dignity. The Luke 2:52 framework that shapes the Fresh Hope approach describes Jesus growing in wisdom, stature, and favor with God and people — a holistic picture of flourishing that includes the physical dimension.

The Sapien Labs finding on food is a scientific confirmation of a theological reality: we are not disembodied souls. We are whole persons — spiritual, mental, relational, and physical — and what we do with our bodies has consequences for our minds and spirits. Neglecting the physical dimension of health is not humility. It is an incomplete stewardship of the self God made.

We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.

— 2 Corinthians 10:5 — Fresh Hope Recovery Principle V

This verse, embedded in Recovery Principle V, is often read in purely cognitive terms — as being about thought patterns and mindset. But its context is broader: the transformation of the whole person. Taking every thought captive requires a brain that is capable of the work. And the brain is biological. It runs on what we feed it.

 

The Traditional Diet Advantage

One of the most striking aspects of the Sapien Labs food data is the regional dimension. The countries that score highest for young adult mind health — in Sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Latin America — are also countries where traditional, whole-food diets remain more prevalent. The countries that score lowest are those where ultra-processed food has most thoroughly displaced traditional eating patterns.

Ultra-Processed Diet Patterns

Packaged snacks and fast food as dietary staples • Industrial seed oils and artificial additives • High sugar drinks replacing water • Loss of traditional food preparation • Eating alone or while on screens • Meals as fuel rather than community

Traditional Diet Patterns

Whole grains, legumes, and vegetables • Animal proteins and fermented foods • Cooking from primary ingredients • Shared mealtimes as family ritual • Food grown or sourced locally • Eating as an act of gratitude and care

Notice that the traditional diet column is not just about ingredients. It is about the culture of eating — the practice of preparing food with care, sharing it with family, and receiving it as a gift. The gut-brain connection is also a family-table connection. The very act of shared meals — which the smartphone data in Blog 4 identified as something screens are eroding — is part of how food protects mental health.

Latin American cuisine, with its emphasis on fresh ingredients, legumes, fermented foods like curtido and chicha, and the cultural centrality of the family meal, is not just a food tradition. According to the emerging science, it is a mental health practice.

 

Recovery Is Whole-Person Work

One of the most important things Fresh Hope teaches is that recovery is not a single-track process. It is not only medication. It is not only therapy. It is not only prayer. It is the patient, intentional cultivation of every dimension of wellbeing — spiritual, mental, relational, and physical.

FRESH HOPE RECOVERY PRINCIPLE V

While medicine is a key component in my recovery, it is not the only answer. Therefore, I choose to explore new ways of thinking and acting in my relationships and daily living.  I too have been part of the cycle of dysfunctional living, either thinking I had all the answers or thinking the problem didn’t belong to me. Therefore, I choose to submit myself to learning new behaviors and taking responsibility for my own healthy, balanced living.  Together we choose freedom over suffering, and joy in living through self-knowledge in action.

Principle V invites something that is countercultural in both clinical and church settings: honest self-examination of how we are living. Not self-condemnation. Not perfectionism. But a willingness to look at our patterns — including what we eat — and ask whether they are serving our wellbeing or undermining it.

For Sergio, this kind of examination was part of his journey. Learning to take his treatment without shame was one layer. Learning to ask for support was another. And alongside those things, learning to care for his body — to see physical stewardship not as vanity but as faithfulness — became part of what it meant to choose life over suffering.

 

Practical Wisdom for the Journey

This blog is not a diet plan. It is not a prescription for what to eat or a list of foods to avoid. The goal is not to add another source of guilt to people who are already carrying a great deal. The goal is to broaden the frame — to help people living with mental health challenges, and those who love them, understand that the body is part of the recovery conversation.

Some simple starting points that align with both the research and the Fresh Hope wholeness framework:

Prioritize whole foods when possible. Traditional diets rich in vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and minimally processed proteins support the gut-brain axis in ways that ultra-processed foods do not.

Reclaim the shared meal. Eating together — without devices, with conversation and presence — is not just a nice tradition. It combines the nutritional, relational, and spiritual dimensions of wellbeing in a single practice.

Reduce sugar and ultra-processed snacks gradually. Not through shame or rigid restriction, but through informed, compassionate choices. Small changes compound over time.

Talk to your treatment team. Nutrition is increasingly part of integrative mental health care. If your provider is not discussing it, you are welcome to bring it up.

And above all: approach your body with the same grace and patience you would offer a dear friend. Recovery is not a performance. It is a direction. Every small step forward counts — and Sergio would be the first to tell you so.

NEXT IN THIS SERIES  |  BLOG 6 OF 10

Why Mental Health Spending Isn’t Working  The United States spends over a trillion dollars annually on mental health — yet young adult outcomes are among the worst in the world. How does a peer support model operating on faith and community outperform billion-dollar systems? Norcángel, from Venezuela living in Argentina, offers three words that no clinical budget can buy.

 

ABOUT FRESH HOPE

Fresh Hope is an international network of Christian peer-support groups for those living with a mental health diagnosis and their loved ones. With 250+ weekly participants across 39+ countries, Fresh Hope integrates evidence-based recovery principles with faith-centered community. Find a group near you at freshhope.us

RESEARCH REFERENCE

Sapien Labs. Global Mind Health in 2025. February 2026. sapienlabs.org

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