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Vi arbetar på en omfattande utbildningsguide för Gut Health Diversity Score. Kom tillbaka snart för steg-för-steg-förklaringar, formler, verkliga exempel och experttips.
The Gut Health Diversity Score quantifies your gut microbiome diversity potential based on weekly intake of plant variety (the 30+ plant species per week threshold from the American Gut Project), daily fermented food servings (matching the Stanford Sonnenburg lab's fermented foods study), dietary fiber grams per day, probiotic supplementation, and processed food exposure. The score draws from peer-reviewed nutrition science to produce a 0–100 number that tracks your behaviors most strongly associated with diverse, resilient gut microbiomes. The scientific foundation comes from three landmark studies. The American Gut Project (McDonald et al., 2018) analyzed stool samples from 11,336 participants and identified plant species variety as the strongest dietary predictor of gut microbiome diversity — people eating 30+ different plant species per week had significantly more diverse microbiomes than those eating 10 or fewer. The Stanford fermented foods study (Wastyk et al., 2021) showed that 10 weeks of consuming 6 servings of fermented foods per day increased gut diversity and reduced inflammatory markers. The ZOE study at King's College London established dietary patterns associated with metabolic and inflammatory outcomes mediated through gut microbiome composition. Why does gut microbiome diversity matter? More diverse microbiomes are associated with reduced risk of inflammatory bowel disease, improved immune function, better mental health (via the gut-brain axis), more efficient nutrient absorption, and reduced all-cause mortality in observational studies. The mechanism: diverse microbiomes are more resilient to perturbations (antibiotics, infections, stress) and produce more diverse short-chain fatty acids (butyrate, propionate, acetate) that nourish the gut barrier and modulate systemic inflammation. This calculator scores five behaviors that drive diversity: plant variety (40 points max, scaling to 30+ plants/week), fermented foods (25 points max, scaling to 3+ servings/day), fiber intake (20 points max, scaling to 30g/day), probiotic supplementation (5 point bonus), and processed food intake (penalty up to 15 points for heavy intake). The total provides a single number to track gut health behavior over time and identify which lever (plants, fermented, fiber, or processed reduction) would most improve your gut health.
Score = min(40, P/30 × 40) + min(25, F/3 × 25) + min(20, Fb/30 × 20) + (Pr ? 5 : 0) − ProcessedPenalty; clamped 0–100
- 1Step 1 — Count Plant Variety (Past 7 Days): List every distinct plant species you've consumed in the past week. Each species counts once regardless of quantity. Sources to include: fruits (apple, pear, banana, mango, kiwi), vegetables (broccoli, kale, spinach, carrot, onion, garlic), herbs (basil, parsley, oregano, mint), spices (cumin, turmeric, cinnamon, black pepper), nuts (almonds, walnuts, pecans), seeds (sunflower, sesame, chia, flax), legumes (lentils, chickpeas, kidney beans). Spice blends count as multiple plants based on ingredients.
- 2Step 2 — Calculate Plant Score (Max 40 Points): Plants Score = min(40, plants/30 × 40). Hitting the 30-plants target gives full 40 points. Below 30, score scales proportionally: 15 plants = 20 points, 20 plants = 26.7 points, 25 plants = 33.3 points. The 30-plant threshold matches the American Gut Project's finding for measurable microbiome diversity gains.
- 3Step 3 — Count Fermented Foods (Per Day): How many servings of fermented foods do you consume daily on average? Sources: yogurt with live cultures (½ cup = 1 serving), kefir (¼ cup = 1 serving), sauerkraut (¼ cup = 1 serving), kimchi (¼ cup = 1 serving), kombucha (½ cup = 1 serving), miso (1 tbsp = 1 serving), tempeh (¼ cup = 1 serving). Skip bread, wine, and pasteurized 'fermented' products without live cultures.
- 4Step 4 — Calculate Fermented Score (Max 25 Points): Fermented Score = min(25, fermented/3 × 25). The Stanford Sonnenburg lab study used 6 servings/day for maximum effect, but most practitioners can achieve meaningful benefits at 3 servings/day. Below 3 servings scales proportionally: 1 serving = 8.3 points, 2 servings = 16.7 points, 3+ servings = 25 points.
- 5Step 5 — Enter Daily Fiber Intake (Grams): Total daily fiber from all sources. Best estimate methods: tracking app (Cronometer, MyFitnessPal) for 1 week to establish baseline; nutrition label reading; rough estimation from food choices. Most Americans average 15g/day; ideal target is 30g/day. Fiber Score = min(20, fiber/30 × 20). Below 30g scales proportionally.
- 6Step 6 — Indicate Probiotic Supplement Use: Daily probiotic supplement adds 5 points. Evidence for probiotic supplements is mixed — single-strain supplements are inferior to fermented food sources (which provide dozens of strains plus prebiotic substrates), but some specific strains have evidence for specific conditions (lactobacillus rhamnosus for diarrhea, bifidobacterium infantis for IBS-D, lactobacillus reuteri for infant colic).
- 7Step 7 — Select Processed Food Intake: None (0 penalty), light 1–2x/week (−2 points), moderate daily (−5 points), heavy most meals (−15 points). Ultra-processed foods damage the gut barrier and microbiome through emulsifiers (polysorbate 80, carboxymethylcellulose), artificial sweeteners (sucralose, saccharin), preservatives, and refined sugars. Total Score = Plants + Fermented + Fiber + Probiotic Bonus − Processed Penalty, clamped 0–100.
Below average — improving fermented foods and reducing processed intake would have biggest impact
This profile is roughly average for a US adult: some plant variety, occasional yogurt, fiber below the 30g target, and daily processed food. The composite score of 45 is in the 'fair' range — gut microbiome diversity is likely below optimal. Highest-leverage improvements: (1) Add 2–3 more fermented servings/day to gain 16.7 points; (2) Reduce processed foods to gain 5 points; (3) Increase plant variety to 30 to gain 13.3 points. Easy 30+ point improvement available.
Strong gut health behaviors — diet matches research-backed best practices
This person hits all three primary targets (30+ plants, 3+ fermented servings, 30g fiber), supplements with probiotics, and limits processed foods to occasional indulgences. The 88 score is in the 'excellent' range and likely correlates with high gut microbiome diversity, reduced inflammatory markers, and the metabolic benefits documented in the Stanford fermented foods study.
Severely deficient — represents typical fast-food-heavy diet
This profile matches the typical Standard American Diet: minimal plant variety (8 plants — mostly potato, corn, lettuce, onion), no fermented foods, fiber far below recommendations, no supplementation, and heavy processed food intake. The 4 score is in the 'critical' range and correlates with high inflammatory markers and reduced microbiome diversity. Sustained at this level over years increases risk of inflammatory bowel disease, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular events.
Strong plants and fiber but missing fermented dimension — add yogurt or sauerkraut
This profile is common among health-conscious whole-food eaters who haven't incorporated fermented foods. Despite excellent plant variety and fiber intake, the score is only 60 because the fermented bucket is empty. The Stanford fermented foods study showed adding 6 servings/day produced gains beyond what plant variety alone provided. Easy fix: 2–3 servings/day of yogurt, kefir, sauerkraut, or kimchi would lift score to ~85 (excellent).
Self-tracking gut health behaviors over time as a habit-formation tool, with quarterly scoring to monitor progress
Identifying which gut-health input (plants, fiber, fermented, or processed reduction) is your weakest link for targeted intervention
Pre-/post-experiment scoring for elimination diets, microbiome interventions, or antibiotic recovery protocols
Coaches and registered dietitians using a quick scoring tool with clients before deeper dietary recommendations
Tracking gut health behaviors after antibiotic courses to ensure proper recovery of microbiome diversity
| Score | Category | Description | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| 85–100 | Excellent | Diverse, resilient microbiome | Maintain current behaviors |
| 70–84 | Good | Above-average gut health | Add 1 more lever (fermented or plants) |
| 50–69 | Fair | Below optimal but not problematic | Target 2 levers for improvement |
| 30–49 | Poor | Significantly reduced diversity | Comprehensive dietary overhaul recommended |
| 0–29 | Critical | High inflammation/disease risk | Consult dietitian; start with processed food reduction |
Why 30 plants per week?
The American Gut Project (McDonald et al., 2018) analyzed stool samples from 11,336 participants and found that people consuming 30 or more distinct plant species per week had significantly more diverse gut microbiomes than those consuming 10 or fewer. Diversity correlates with reduced inflammation, better immune function, and lower disease risk. The 30 number is the threshold where diversity gains become measurable; below 20 plants/week, diversity is typically suboptimal.
What counts as a fermented food?
Foods made through bacterial or yeast fermentation that retain live cultures at time of consumption: yogurt with live and active cultures, kefir, refrigerated sauerkraut (not pasteurized shelf-stable), kimchi, kombucha, miso, tempeh, lacto-fermented pickles. Bread doesn't count (heat kills the yeast). Wine and beer don't count (alcohol kills bacteria). Pasteurized 'sauerkraut' from shelf-stable jars usually doesn't count — check labels for 'live cultures' or 'unpasteurized.'
How long does it take to improve gut diversity?
The Stanford Sonnenburg study showed measurable increases in gut diversity after 10 weeks of consistent fermented food consumption. Plant variety changes typically show in stool microbiome composition after 4–8 weeks. Acute changes (single meals) shift microbial gene expression within 24 hours but don't permanently change community composition without sustained behavioral change.
Do probiotic supplements actually work?
Evidence is mixed and context-dependent. Single-strain supplements (most common in stores) have specific evidence for specific conditions: Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG for antibiotic-associated diarrhea, Bifidobacterium infantis for IBS-D, Saccharomyces boulardii for C. difficile. General 'gut health' probiotic supplements lack robust evidence. Fermented foods provide superior diversity (dozens of strains) plus prebiotic substrates that single-strain pills don't.
Can I take antibiotics and maintain gut health?
Antibiotics significantly reduce gut microbiome diversity (sometimes by 50%+ in single courses), and recovery can take 6 months to years. During and after antibiotic courses: continue fermented foods (provides fresh microbial inputs), maximize plant variety (provides prebiotic substrates), consider probiotic supplements with strain-specific antibiotic-resistant strains (Saccharomyces boulardii). Avoid antibiotic overuse — unnecessary courses cause cumulative damage.
What about FODMAPs and IBS — does this score still apply?
Partially. People with IBS (especially IBS-D) often need to reduce specific FODMAP-containing plants temporarily during elimination phase, which conflicts with the 30-plant rule. Use this calculator after IBS symptoms are controlled, focusing on the plant species you do tolerate. Fermented foods may be poorly tolerated initially in some IBS cases but improve with gradual reintroduction. Work with a registered dietitian for IBS-specific plant variety strategies.
How accurate is fiber tracking via apps?
Apps like Cronometer and MyFitnessPal are reasonably accurate for fiber tracking from packaged foods (uses USDA database) but less accurate for restaurant meals and home-cooked dishes where ingredient quantities are estimated. Most people's app-tracked fiber is within ±5g of actual intake. The directional information (above or below 30g) is reliable even if precise numbers vary by a few grams.
Proffstips
Aim for 'Eat the Rainbow' — different colors in fruits and vegetables typically indicate different phytonutrients and different plant species, helping you hit 30 distinct plants per week without overthinking. Frozen vegetables count; spice blends count as one plant per distinct herb/spice listed. Track for one week to establish baseline, then add 2–3 new plants per week until you consistently exceed 30.
Visste du?
The Hadza, a hunter-gatherer people in Tanzania, consume 600+ plant species over the course of a year — roughly 20× the average Western diet. Their gut microbiome diversity is among the highest ever measured, with bacteria species that have largely disappeared from Western populations. Stanford researcher Jeff Leach's Human Food Project sequenced Hadza gut microbiomes and documented species like Treponema and Spirochaeta that haven't been found in any Western populations. This 'lost' microbial diversity is suspected to play a role in modern Western disease patterns.