Center for Human Nutrition, Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins, Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
J Nutr. 2011 Feb;141(2):304-11. doi: 10.3945/jn.110.132613. Epub 2010 Dec 22.
Food prices are expected to affect dietary intakes, however, previous findings are mixed and few are based on nationally representative data. We examined the associations of price indices of fast foods (FF-PI) and fruits and vegetables (FV-PI) with dietary intakes and BMI among U.S. children and adolescents using data from the Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals (CSFII; 1994-1998) for 6759 children (2-9 y) and 1679 adolescents (10-18 y). FF-PI and FV-PI were linked to individuals' CSFII dietary data through city-level geocodes. Main outcomes included intakes of selected nutrients and food groups, a fast food consumption index (FF-CI), diet quality using the 2005 Healthy Eating Index (HEI), and BMI. Among children (2-9 y), a higher FF-PI (by $1) was associated with intakes of lower FF-CI (β ± SE: -0.9 ± 0.3 count/d), higher HEI (6.6 ± 2.5), higher intakes of fiber (2.7 ± 0.7 g/d), calcium (225.7 ± 52.3 mg/d), dairy (172.5 ± 36.2 g/d), and fruits and vegetables (113.3 ± 23.4 cup equivalents/d). FV-PI was inversely related to fiber intake (β ± SE: -3.3 ± 1.5 g/d) and positively associated with BMI (4.3 ± 1.2 kg/m(2)). Less consistent findings were ascribed to FV-PI and among adolescents (10-18 y). Significant associations were almost equally balanced between low and high family income groups, with some significant interactions between food prices and family income observed, particularly among children (2-9 y). Our findings suggest that among U.S. children aged 2-9 y, higher FF-PI is associated with better dietary quality, whereas higher FV-PI is linked to higher BMI and lower fiber intake. Associations varied by family income in children for many dietary intake variables.
预计食品价格会影响饮食摄入,但先前的研究结果不一,且多数研究基于的是全国代表性数据。我们使用 1994-1998 年美国个人食物摄入持续调查(CSFII)中 6759 名儿童(2-9 岁)和 1679 名青少年(10-18 岁)的数据,研究了快餐食品价格指数(FF-PI)和水果及蔬菜价格指数(FV-PI)与美国儿童和青少年饮食摄入和 BMI 的相关性。通过城市级别地理编码将 FF-PI 和 FV-PI 与个体 CSFII 饮食数据联系起来。主要结果包括选定营养素和食物组的摄入量、快餐消费指数(FF-CI)、使用 2005 年健康饮食指数(HEI)评估的饮食质量以及 BMI。在儿童(2-9 岁)中,FF-PI 每增加 1 美元,FF-CI(β±SE:-0.9±0.3 计数/天)摄入量越低,HEI(6.6±2.5)越高,纤维(2.7±0.7 g/天)、钙(225.7±52.3 mg/天)、奶制品(172.5±36.2 g/天)和水果及蔬菜(113.3±23.4 杯当量/天)摄入量越高。FV-PI 与纤维摄入量呈负相关(β±SE:-3.3±1.5 g/天),与 BMI 呈正相关(4.3±1.2 kg/m2)。青少年(10-18 岁)的结果则不太一致。在低收入和高收入家庭群体中,食物价格与这些变量之间的关联几乎均衡,在儿童(2-9 岁)中观察到食物价格与家庭收入之间存在一些显著的相互作用。我们的研究结果表明,在 2-9 岁的美国儿童中,较高的 FF-PI 与更好的饮食质量有关,而较高的 FV-PI 与较高的 BMI 和较低的纤维摄入量有关。在儿童中,许多饮食摄入变量的关联因家庭收入而异。