Eicher-Miller Heather A, Fulgoni Victor L, Keast Debra R
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2015 Jun;115(6):907-18.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2014.11.004. Epub 2015 Jan 8.
The 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans (DGA) recommends nutrients to increase and to decrease for US adults. The contributions processed foods make to the US intake of nutrients to increase and decrease may vary by the level of processing and by population subgroup.
The hypotheses that the intakes of nutrients to increase or decrease, as specified by the DGA, are contributed exclusively from certain processed food categories and consumed differentially by population subgroups by sex, poverty-income ratio (ratio of household income to poverty threshold), and race/ethnicity was tested along with the hypothesis that specific processed food categories are responsible for nutrient intake differences between the population subgroups.
The 24-hour dietary recall data from the cross-sectional 2003-2008 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey was used to determine population subgroup energy and nutrient intake differences among processed food categories defined by the International Food Information Council Foundation Continuum of Processed Foods.
PARTICIPANTS/SETTING: Fifteen thousand fifty-three US adults aged ≥19 years.
The mean daily intake of energy and nutrients from processed food categories reported by population subgroups were compared using regression analysis to determine covariate-adjusted least square means.
Processed food categories that contributed to energy and nutrient intake differences within subgroups did not uniformly or exclusively contribute nutrients to increase or decrease per DGA recommendations. The between-group differences in mean daily intake of both nutrients to increase and decrease contributed by the various processed food categories were diverse and were not contributed exclusively from specific processed food categories.
Recommendations for a diet adhering to the DGA should continue to focus on the energy and nutrient content, frequency of consumption, and serving size of individual foods rather than the level of processing.
《2010年美国膳食指南》(DGA)针对美国成年人推荐了应增加和减少摄入的营养素。加工食品对美国应增加和减少摄入的营养素的贡献可能因加工水平和人群亚组而异。
检验以下假设:DGA规定的应增加或减少摄入的营养素摄入量仅来自某些加工食品类别,并且按性别、贫困收入比(家庭收入与贫困线的比率)和种族/族裔划分的人群亚组对其消费量存在差异;同时检验另一个假设,即特定加工食品类别导致人群亚组之间的营养素摄入量差异。
使用2003 - 2008年横断面全国健康和营养检查调查中的24小时膳食回顾数据,来确定国际食品信息理事会基金会加工食品连续体定义的加工食品类别中人群亚组的能量和营养素摄入量差异。
参与者/地点:15053名年龄≥19岁的美国成年人。
使用回归分析比较人群亚组报告的加工食品类别中能量和营养素的平均每日摄入量,以确定协变量调整后的最小二乘均值。
导致亚组内能量和营养素摄入量差异的加工食品类别,并非按照DGA建议一致地或仅对应增加或减少的营养素做出贡献。各类加工食品导致的应增加和减少摄入的营养素平均每日摄入量的组间差异各不相同,并非仅由特定加工食品类别导致。
遵循DGA的饮食建议应继续关注个体食物的能量和营养素含量、食用频率和份量,而非加工水平。