Department of Family, Nutrition, and Exercise Sciences, Queens College of the City University of New York, Flushing, NY 11367, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2012 Sep;96(3):601-12. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.112.035535. Epub 2012 Jul 25.
Children from ethnic minority and low-income families in the United States have higher rates of poor health and higher mortality rates. Diet, an acknowledged correlate of health, may mediate the known race-ethnic and socioeconomic differentials in the health of US children.
The objective was to examine the independent association of race-ethnicity, family income, and education with nutritional and lipid biomarkers in US children.
We used data from the NHANES 2003-2006 to examine serum concentrations of vitamins A, D, E, C, B-6, and B-12; serum concentrations of folate, carotenoids, and lipids; and dietary intakes of corresponding nutrients for 2-19-y-old children (n = ~2700-7500). Multiple covariate-adjusted regression methods were used to examine the independent and joint associations of race-ethnicity, family income, and education with biomarker status.
Non-Hispanic blacks had lower mean serum concentrations of vitamins A, B-6, and E and α-carotene than did non-Hispanic whites. Both non-Hispanic blacks and Mexican Americans had higher mean serum vitamin C, β-cryptoxanthin, and lutein + zeaxanthin but lower folate and vitamin D concentrations compared with non-Hispanic whites. In comparison with non-Hispanic whites, non-Hispanic blacks were less likely to have low serum HDL cholesterol or high triglycerides. Family income and education predicted few biomarker or dietary outcomes, and the observed associations were weak. Moreover, modification of race-ethnic differentials by income or education (or vice versa) was noted for very few biomarkers.
Race-ethnicity, but not family income or education, was a strong independent predictor of serum nutrient concentrations and dietary micronutrient intakes in US children and adolescents.
美国少数民族和低收入家庭的儿童健康状况较差,死亡率较高。饮食是健康的已知相关因素,可能会影响美国儿童健康的已知种族-民族和社会经济差异。
本研究旨在检验种族-民族、家庭收入和教育与美国儿童营养和脂质生物标志物的独立关联。
我们使用了来自 NHANES 2003-2006 年的数据,研究了 2-19 岁儿童(n=~2700-7500)的血清维生素 A、D、E、C、B-6 和 B-12 浓度、血清类胡萝卜素和脂质浓度以及相应营养素的膳食摄入量。采用多变量调整回归方法,检验种族-民族、家庭收入和教育与生物标志物状况的独立和联合关联。
与非西班牙裔白人相比,非西班牙裔黑人的血清维生素 A、B-6 和 E 以及α-胡萝卜素浓度较低。与非西班牙裔白人相比,非西班牙裔黑人和墨西哥裔美国人的血清维生素 C、β-隐黄质和叶黄素+玉米黄质浓度较高,但叶酸和维生素 D 浓度较低。与非西班牙裔白人相比,非西班牙裔黑人的血清 HDL 胆固醇水平较低或甘油三酯水平较高的可能性较小。家庭收入和教育仅能预测少数生物标志物或膳食结果,且观察到的关联较弱。此外,收入或教育对种族差异的影响(或反之亦然)在少数生物标志物中得到了体现。
种族-民族是美国儿童和青少年血清营养素浓度和膳食微量营养素摄入量的重要独立预测因素,而非家庭收入或教育。