National Public Health Institute, Helsinki, Finland.
Public Health Nutr. 2009 Nov;12(11):2174-82. doi: 10.1017/S136898000900559X. Epub 2009 Apr 30.
The relationship of socio-economic status and vegetable consumption is examined in nine European countries. The aim is to analyse whether the pattern of socio-economic variation with regard to vegetable consumption is similar in all studied countries with high v. low vegetable availability and affordability, and whether education has an independent effect on vegetable consumption once the effects of other socio-economic factors have been taken into account.
The data for the study were obtained from national surveys conducted in Finland, Denmark, Germany, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, France, Italy and Spain, in 1998 or later. These surveys included data on the frequency of use of vegetables. Food Balance Sheets indicated that the availability of vegetables was best in the Mediterranean countries. The prices of vegetables were lowest in the Mediterranean countries and Germany.
Educational level was positively associated with vegetable consumption in the Nordic and Baltic countries. In the Mediterranean countries, education was not directly associated with the use of vegetables but, after adjusting for place of residence and occupation, it was found that those with a lower educational level consumed vegetables slightly more often. Manual workers consumed vegetables less often than non-manual workers, but otherwise there was no systematic association with occupation.
The Mediterranean countries did not show a positive association between educational level and vegetable consumption. The positive association found in the Northern European countries is linked to the lower availability and affordability of vegetables there and their everyday cooking habits with no long-standing cultural tradition of using vegetables.
研究了九个欧洲国家的社会经济地位与蔬菜消费之间的关系。目的是分析在蔬菜供应和可负担性高低不同的所有研究国家中,蔬菜消费的社会经济差异模式是否相似,以及在考虑到其他社会经济因素的影响后,教育是否对蔬菜消费有独立的影响。
本研究的数据来自于 1998 年或之后在芬兰、丹麦、德国、爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚、立陶宛、法国、意大利和西班牙进行的全国性调查。这些调查包括蔬菜使用频率的数据。粮食平衡表表明,蔬菜供应最好的是地中海国家。蔬菜价格在地中海国家和德国最低。
在北欧和波罗的海国家,教育程度与蔬菜消费呈正相关。在地中海国家,教育与蔬菜的使用没有直接关联,但在调整居住地和职业后,发现教育程度较低的人蔬菜消费略高。体力劳动者比非体力劳动者蔬菜消费频率更低,但职业与蔬菜消费之间没有系统的关联。
地中海国家的教育程度与蔬菜消费之间没有正相关关系。在北欧国家发现的正相关关系与蔬菜供应和可负担性较低以及日常烹饪习惯有关,这些国家没有长期使用蔬菜的文化传统。