Mattes Richard, Foster Gary D
Department of Nutrition Science, Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana, USA.
Obesity (Silver Spring). 2014 Dec;22(12):2459-61. doi: 10.1002/oby.20922.
The food environment plays an important and often dominant role in food choice, eating patterns, and ultimately, energy intake. The Obesity Society and the American Society for Nutrition jointly sponsored a series of reviews on topics of interest to both memberships. The goal was to consider the state of understanding on selected issues related to the food environment and obesity and to identify key knowledge gaps.
The first article (not necessarily of importance) targeted energy density (ED) and focuses on the role of ED in the regulation of energy intake and body weight. It offers recommendations for prioritizing research. The second article addresses economic factors and examines food and beverage purchases as a function of price changes. It concludes that targeted food taxes and subsidies alone are unlikely to substantially affect obesity. The third article concerns sweetened beverages and points out the difficulty in establishing the strength of the association between intake of sugar-sweetened beverages and weight gain and obesity. In the fourth article, the contributions of palatability and variety to eating behavior and weight are reviewed. Article five explores the influence of portion size on energy intake and weight management. It finds that consumers generally tend to eat proportionally more as portion size increases. The sixth article focuses on the efficacy and effectiveness of eating frequency manipulations for body weight management and finds that such manipulations have consistently yielded null results. Finally, article seven identifies several limitations of the existing literature regarding neighborhood access to healthy foods.
This series of reviews addresses important questions regarding the contribution of the food environment to obesity. Independent of physiological/genetic determinants, factors such as ED, cost, food form, palatability, variety, portion size, eating frequency, and access to healthy food are each evaluated for their role in the etiology of obesity and metabolic health. This series of reviews also identifies important gaps in knowledge.
食物环境在食物选择、饮食模式以及最终的能量摄入方面起着重要且往往占主导地位的作用。肥胖协会和美国营养学会联合发起了一系列针对两个学会会员共同感兴趣主题的综述。目标是考量对与食物环境和肥胖相关的选定问题的理解现状,并确定关键的知识空白。
第一篇文章(不一定具有重要性)以能量密度(ED)为目标,聚焦于ED在能量摄入和体重调节中的作用。它为研究优先级提供了建议。第二篇文章探讨经济因素,并将食品和饮料购买量作为价格变化的函数进行研究。结论是仅针对性的食品税和补贴不太可能对肥胖产生实质性影响。第三篇文章关注含糖饮料,指出难以确定含糖饮料摄入量与体重增加及肥胖之间关联的强度。第四篇文章综述了适口性和多样性对饮食行为及体重的影响。第五篇文章探讨了食物分量大小对能量摄入和体重管理的影响。研究发现,随着食物分量增大,消费者通常倾向于按比例吃得更多。第六篇文章聚焦于饮食频率调整对体重管理的功效,发现此类调整一直未产生显著效果。最后,第七篇文章指出了现有文献在邻里获取健康食品方面的若干局限性。
这一系列综述探讨了有关食物环境对肥胖影响的重要问题。独立于生理/遗传决定因素,诸如ED、成本、食物形式、适口性、多样性、食物分量大小、饮食频率以及获取健康食品等因素,均针对其在肥胖病因学和代谢健康中的作用进行了评估。这一系列综述还确定了重要的知识空白。