Abstract
Nutrition is a core pillar of Lifestyle Medicine with growing relevance to mental and behavioral health. While traditionally emphasized for cardiometabolic disease prevention, emerging evidence demonstrates that dietary patterns directly influence mood, cognition, stress resilience, and emotional regulation. This article synthesizes current research on biological pathways linking food and mental health-including the gut-brain axis, microbiome diversity, neurotransmitter synthesis, inflammation, and dietary pattern interventions. A diverse and balanced microbiome, adequate intake of omega-3s, B vitamins, and trace minerals, and diets low in inflammatory foods support healthier brain signaling and improved emotional stability. Clinical trials show that Mediterranean and plant-forward diets reduce depressive symptoms, while micronutrient supplementation enhances attention, emotional regulation, and stress response across the lifespan. Nutrition is also a critical but underutilized component of substance use recovery and child and adolescent behavioral health. Cultural food traditions further shape well-being by reinforcing identity, belonging, and resilience. Integrating nutrition screening, counseling, and food-as-medicine interventions into behavioral health care can strengthen treatment outcomes, especially when aligned with culturally informed practices and community needs. Systems-level approaches-including policies addressing food insecurity and produce prescription programs-demonstrate meaningful improvements in mental health. Overall, nutrition represents a powerful, accessible, and culturally resonant strategy to support emotional, cognitive, and behavioral well-being.