Schoenthaler S J, Bier I D, Young K, Nichols D, Jansenns S
Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice, California State University, Stanislaus, Turlock 95380, USA.
J Altern Complement Med. 2000 Feb;6(1):19-29. doi: 10.1089/acm.2000.6.19.
Many medical, nutrition, and education professionals have long suspected that poor diet impairs the academic performance of Western schoolchildren; academic performance often improves after improved diet. However, others have suggested that such academic gains may be due to psychologic effects rather than nutrition. To resolve this issue, two independent research teams conducted randomized trials in which children were given placebos or low-dose vitamin-mineral tablets designed to raise nutrient intake to the equivalent of a well-balanced diet. Both teams reported significantly greater gains in nonverbal intelligence among the supplemented groups. The findings were important because of the apparent inadequacy of diet they revealed and the magnitude of the potential for increased intelligence. However, none of the ten subsequent replications, or the two original trials, were without limitations leaving this issue in controversy.
To determine if schoolchildren who consume low-dose vitamin-mineral tablets will have a significantly larger increase in nonverbal intelligence than children who consume placebos in a study that overcomes the primary criticisms directed at the previous 12 controlled trials.
A double-blind, placebo-controlled trial using stratified randomization within each teacher's class based on preintervention nonverbal intelligence.
Two "working class," primarily Hispanic, elementary schools in Phoenix, Arizona, participated in the study. Slightly more than half the teachers in each school distributed the tablets daily to 245 schoolchildren aged 6 to 12 years.
Daily vitamin-mineral supplementation at 50% of the U.S. daily recommended allowance (RDA) for 3 months versus placebo.
Post-test nonverbal IQ, as measured by the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISC-R), while controlling for pretest nonverbal IQ as a covariate. FOUR MAIN RESULTS: First, a significant difference of 2.5 IQ points (95% CI: 1.85-3.15) was found between 125 children given active tablets and 120 children given placebo tablets (p = 0.038). Second, this finding is consistent with the mean 3.2 IQ point net gain found in the 12 similar but less rigorous studies. Third, a significantly higher proportion of children in the active group gained 15 or more IQ points when compared to the placebo group (p < 0.01). Fourth, although 81 matched pairs produced no difference at all in nonverbal IQ gain, the modest 2.5 IQ point net gain for the entire sample can be explained by the remaining 24 children who took active tablets, and had a 16 point higher net gain in IQ than the remaining 19 placebo controls.
This study confirms that vitamin-mineral supplementation modestly raised the nonverbal intelligence of some groups of Western schoolchildren by 2 to 3 points but not that of most Western schoolchildren, presumably because the majority were already adequately nourished. This study also confirms that vitamin-mineral supplementation markedly raises the non-verbal intelligence of a minority of Western schoolchildren, presumably because they were too poorly nourished before supplementation for optimal brain function. Because nonverbal intelligence is closely associated with academic performance, it follows that schools with children who consume substandard diets should find it difficult to produce academic performance equal to those schools with children who consume diets that come closer to providing the nutrients suggested in the U.S. RDA. The parents of schoolchildren whose academic performance is substandard would be well advised to seek a nutritionally oriented physician for assessment of their children's nutritional status as a possible etiology.
长期以来,许多医学、营养和教育专业人士一直怀疑不良饮食会影响西方学童的学业成绩;改善饮食后,学业成绩往往会提高。然而,其他人则认为,这种学业成绩的提高可能是由于心理效应而非营养。为了解决这个问题,两个独立的研究团队进行了随机试验,给孩子们服用安慰剂或低剂量维生素 - 矿物质片,旨在将营养摄入量提高到相当于均衡饮食的水平。两个团队都报告说,补充组的非语言智力有显著更大的提高。这些发现很重要,因为它们揭示了饮食明显不足以及智力提高的潜在幅度。然而,随后的十次重复试验以及最初的两次试验都有局限性,使得这个问题仍存在争议。
在一项克服了针对之前12项对照试验的主要批评的研究中,确定服用低剂量维生素 - 矿物质片的学童在非语言智力方面的提高是否会比服用安慰剂的学童显著更大。
一项双盲、安慰剂对照试验,在每位教师的班级内根据干预前的非语言智力进行分层随机分组。
亚利桑那州凤凰城的两所“工人阶级”小学,主要是西班牙裔,参与了这项研究。每所学校略多于一半的教师每天给245名6至12岁的学童分发药片。
每天补充维生素 - 矿物质,剂量为美国每日推荐摄入量(RDA)的50%,持续3个月,与安慰剂对照。
通过韦氏儿童智力量表修订版(WISC - R)测量的测试后非语言智商,同时将测试前非语言智商作为协变量进行控制。四个主要结果:第一,在125名服用活性药片的儿童和120名服用安慰剂药片的儿童之间发现了2.5个智商点的显著差异(95%置信区间:1.85 - 3.15)(p = 0.038)。第二,这一发现与12项类似但不太严格的研究中发现的平均3.2个智商点的净增益一致。第三,与安慰剂组相比,活性组中获得15个或更多智商点的儿童比例显著更高(p < 0.01)。第四,尽管81对匹配对在非语言智商增益方面没有差异,但整个样本中2.5个智商点的适度净增益可以由其余24名服用活性药片的儿童来解释,他们的智商净增益比其余19名安慰剂对照组儿童高16个点。
这项研究证实,补充维生素 - 矿物质适度提高了一些西方学童群体的非语言智力2至3个点,但并非大多数西方学童,可能是因为大多数人已经营养充足。这项研究还证实,补充维生素 - 矿物质显著提高了少数西方学童的非语言智力,可能是因为他们在补充之前营养太差,无法实现最佳脑功能。由于非语言智力与学业成绩密切相关,因此,那些学生饮食不达标的学校可能难以取得与学生饮食更接近美国RDA建议营养水平的学校相同的学业成绩。学业成绩不达标的学童家长最好寻求一位注重营养的医生来评估孩子的营养状况,看是否可能是病因所在。