Yannakoulia Mary, Panagiotakos Demosthenes, Pitsavos Christos, Skoumas Yannis, Stafanadis Christodoulos
Harokopio University, Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, El. Venizelou 70, Athens 17671, Greece.
Soc Sci Med. 2008 Jun;66(11):2230-9. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.01.051. Epub 2008 Mar 10.
Marital status has been recognized as a significant health-influencing factor, including cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. The aim of the present paper was to evaluate whether eating habits mediate the relationship between marital status and levels of CVD risk factors among apparently healthy men and women from the ATTICA Study. During 2001-2002, we randomly enrolled 1514 men (18-87 years old) and 1528 women (18-89 years old) from the Attica area, Greece; the sampling was stratified by the age-gender distribution of the region. Participants underwent clinical, anthropometric and psychological assessment. Food consumption was assessed through a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. Participants were classified as never married, married, divorced and widowed. Discriminant analysis revealed that vegetable consumption, followed by red meat, potatoes, poultry, and soft drinks were the factors with the higher discriminating ability among the food groups studied. In particular, dietary patterns of never married participants were characterized by the consumption of potatoes and red meat, those of married participants by nuts, legumes and fish, those of divorced participants by fruits, cereals and soft drinks, whereas those of widowed participants by dairy, vegetables, sweets and poultry. In addition, never married and divorced participants reported eating fast-foods more frequently and drink less alcohol compared to married or widowed participants. After controlling for potential confounders (i.e., age, gender, physical activity, anxiety score and smoking habits), the reported marital status of the participants was associated only with body mass index and total serum cholesterol levels. When the analysis was repeated after taking into account the information on dietary habits by creating four "new" dietary-adjusted marital status groups, no significant association was revealed between marital status and body mass index and blood cholesterol levels. This finding implies that, in our population, eating patterns may explain the observed differences between marital status and selected CVD risk factors.
婚姻状况已被视为一个影响健康的重要因素,包括心血管疾病(CVD)风险。本文旨在评估饮食习惯是否介导了来自阿提卡研究的表面健康的男性和女性的婚姻状况与CVD风险因素水平之间的关系。在2001年至2002年期间,我们从希腊阿提卡地区随机招募了1514名男性(18 - 87岁)和1528名女性(18 - 89岁);抽样按该地区的年龄 - 性别分布进行分层。参与者接受了临床、人体测量和心理评估。通过半定量食物频率问卷评估食物摄入量。参与者被分为从未结婚、已婚、离婚和丧偶。判别分析显示,在所研究的食物组中,蔬菜消费,其次是红肉、土豆、家禽和软饮料是具有较高判别能力的因素。特别是,从未结婚参与者的饮食模式以土豆和红肉消费为特征,已婚参与者以坚果、豆类和鱼类为特征,离婚参与者以水果、谷物和软饮料为特征,而丧偶参与者以乳制品、蔬菜、甜食和家禽为特征。此外,与已婚或丧偶参与者相比,从未结婚和离婚参与者报告更频繁地食用快餐且饮酒较少。在控制了潜在混杂因素(即年龄、性别、身体活动、焦虑评分和吸烟习惯)后,参与者报告的婚姻状况仅与体重指数和总血清胆固醇水平相关。在考虑饮食习惯信息创建四个“新的”饮食调整婚姻状况组后重复分析时,婚姻状况与体重指数和血液胆固醇水平之间未显示出显著关联。这一发现表明,在我们的人群中,饮食模式可能解释了婚姻状况与选定的CVD风险因素之间观察到的差异。