How can diet affect focus & attention?

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    Last Updated: May 16, 2025

    Healthier diet patterns, particularly those that are high in fish and plant-based foods, are associated with improved focus and attention, whereas Western-style diets that are rich in saturated fat and refined sugar are associated with decreased focus. Observational studies suggest that unhealthy diets can impair attention in both children and adults, but more research is needed to establish a causal relationship.

    Healthier diet patterns tend to be associated with improved focus & attention relative to western-style diets rich in saturated fat and refined sugar. High intakes of fish and plant-based foods were associated with increased measures of attention among elderly people in one cross-sectional study.[1] Observational studies of children and young adults with ADHD have also found links between focus & attention ability and healthier diet patterns. Moreover, overall less-healthy diet patterns have been associated with decreased focus & attention in these age groups.

    The effect of an unhealthy diet on focus and attention may also be acute, as suggested by one study that found consumption of a 5- or 7-day high-fat diet was sufficient to impair focus & attention in both healthy[2] and sedentary[3] adults. However, most of the evidence on the effect of diet on focus & attention tends to be observational in nature, and overall results have been mixed. More research is needed to determine whether there is a causal relationship between diet and focus & attention in different populations.