Satia Jessie A, Galanko Joseph A, Siega-Riz Anna Maria
Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2004 Dec;7(8):1089-96. doi: 10.1079/PHN2004662.
To examine associations of the frequency of eating at fast-food restaurants with demographic, behavioural and psychosocial factors and dietary intake in African American adults.
Self-reported data from a population-based cross-sectional survey of 658 African Americans, aged 20-70 years, in North Carolina. An 11-page questionnaire assessed eating at fast-food restaurants, demographic, behavioural and diet-related psychosocial factors, and dietary intake (fruit, vegetable, total fat and saturated fat intakes, and fat-related dietary behaviours).
The participants were aged 43.9+/-11.6 years (mean+/-standard deviation), 41% were male, 37% were college graduates and 75% were overweight or obese. Seventy-six per cent reported eating at fast-food restaurants during the previous 3 months: 4% usually, 22% often and 50% sometimes. Frequency of eating at fast-food restaurants was positively associated with total fat and saturated fat intakes and fat-related dietary behaviours (P<0.0001) and inversely associated with vegetable intake (P<0.05). For example, mean daily fat intake was 39.0 g for usually/often respondents and 28.3 g for those reporting rare/never eating at fast-food restaurants. Participants who reported usual/often eating at fast-food restaurants were younger, never married, obese, physically inactive and multivitamin non-users (all P<0.01). Frequency of eating at fast-food restaurants was positively associated with fair/poor self-rated health, weak belief in a diet-cancer relationship, low self-efficacy for healthy eating, weight dissatisfaction, and perceived difficulties of preparing healthy meals and ordering healthy foods in restaurants (all P<0.05). Frequency of eating at fast-food restaurants did not differ significantly by sex, education, smoking, ability to purchase healthy foods or knowledge of the Food Guide Pyramid.
Eating at fast-food restaurants is associated with higher fat and lower vegetable intakes in African Americans. Interventions to reduce fast-food consumption and obesity in African Americans should consider demographic and behavioural characteristics and address attitudes about diet-disease relationships and convenience barriers to healthy eating.
研究美国非裔成年人在快餐店就餐频率与人口统计学、行为和心理社会因素以及饮食摄入量之间的关联。
基于北卡罗来纳州658名年龄在20至70岁之间的美国非裔人群的横断面调查的自我报告数据。一份11页的问卷评估了在快餐店就餐情况、人口统计学、行为和与饮食相关的心理社会因素以及饮食摄入量(水果、蔬菜、总脂肪和饱和脂肪摄入量以及与脂肪相关的饮食行为)。
参与者年龄为43.9±11.6岁(均值±标准差),41%为男性,37%为大学毕业生,75%超重或肥胖。76%的人报告在过去3个月内在快餐店就餐:4%通常去,22%经常去,50%有时去。在快餐店就餐的频率与总脂肪和饱和脂肪摄入量以及与脂肪相关的饮食行为呈正相关(P<0.0001),与蔬菜摄入量呈负相关(P<0.05)。例如,通常/经常在快餐店就餐的受访者平均每日脂肪摄入量为39.0克,而报告很少/从不在快餐店就餐的人平均每日脂肪摄入量为28.3克。报告通常/经常在快餐店就餐的参与者更年轻、未婚、肥胖、身体不活跃且不服用多种维生素(所有P<0.01)。在快餐店就餐的频率与自我评估健康状况为一般/较差、对饮食与癌症关系的信念薄弱、健康饮食的自我效能感低、对体重不满意以及认为准备健康餐食和在餐馆点健康食物有困难呈正相关(所有P<0.05)。在快餐店就餐的频率在性别、教育程度、吸烟、购买健康食物的能力或对食物指南金字塔的了解方面没有显著差异。
在美国非裔人群中,在快餐店就餐与较高的脂肪摄入量和较低的蔬菜摄入量相关。减少美国非裔人群快餐消费和肥胖的干预措施应考虑人口统计学和行为特征,并解决对饮食与疾病关系的态度以及健康饮食的便利障碍问题。