Kell K P, Judd S E, Pearson K E, Shikany J M, Fernández J R
Department of Nutrition Sciences,UAB School of Health Professions,514 Webb Nutrition Sciences Building, 1675 University Boulevard,Birmingham,AL35294,USA.
Department of Biostatistics,UAB School of Public Health,RPHB 327G, 1665 University Boulevard,Birmingham,AL35294,USA.
Br J Nutr. 2015 Jun 14;113(11):1792-9. doi: 10.1017/S0007114515000938. Epub 2015 Apr 14.
Socio-economic status (SES) has been associated with measures of diet quality; however, such measures have not directly captured overall eating practices in individuals. Based on the factor analysis of fifty-six food groups from FFQ, associations between patterns of food consumption and SES were examined in a nationwide sample of 17,062 black (34·6%) and white participants (age >45 years) from the REasons for Geographic And Racial Differences in Stroke (REGARDS) study. Logistic regression models adjusted for age, sex, racial group and geographic region were used to examine adherence to five emergent dietary patterns (convenience, plant-based, sweets/fats, southern and alcohol/salads) according to four levels each of individual education, household income and community-level SES. Further models assessed adherence to these dietary patterns by racial group, and an overall model including both racial groups examined whether the relationships between SES and adherence to these dietary patterns differed among black and white participants. For all the three measures of SES, higher SES had been associated with greater adherence to plant-based and alcohol/salads patterns, but lower adherence to sweets/fats and southern patterns. Statistically significant differences between black and white participants were observed in the associations between household income and adherence to alcohol/salads, individual education and adherence to plant-based and sweets/fats, and community SES and adherence to convenience patterns. As adherence to dietary patterns has been shown to be associated with health outcomes in this population (e.g. stroke), the present study offers valuable insight into behavioural and environmental factors that may contribute to health disparities in the diverse US population.
社会经济地位(SES)与饮食质量指标相关;然而,这些指标并未直接反映个体的整体饮食习惯。基于对食物频率问卷(FFQ)中56个食物组的因素分析,在一项针对来自中风地理和种族差异原因(REGARDS)研究的全国性样本中,对17,062名黑人(34.6%)和白人参与者(年龄>45岁)的食物消费模式与SES之间的关联进行了研究。根据个体教育、家庭收入和社区层面SES的四个水平,使用调整了年龄、性别、种族群体和地理区域的逻辑回归模型来检验对五种新兴饮食模式(方便食品、植物性、甜食/脂肪、南方饮食和酒精/沙拉)的依从性。进一步的模型按种族群体评估对这些饮食模式的依从性,一个包括两个种族群体的总体模型检验了SES与对这些饮食模式的依从性之间的关系在黑人和白人参与者中是否存在差异。对于所有三种SES衡量指标,较高的SES与对植物性和酒精/沙拉模式的更高依从性相关,但与对甜食/脂肪和南方饮食模式的较低依从性相关。在家庭收入与对酒精/沙拉的依从性、个体教育与对植物性和甜食/脂肪的依从性以及社区SES与对方便食品模式的依从性之间的关联中,观察到黑人和白人参与者之间存在统计学上的显著差异。由于在该人群中,对饮食模式的依从性已被证明与健康结果(如中风)相关,本研究为可能导致美国多样化人群健康差异的行为和环境因素提供了有价值的见解。