Alkerwi Ala'a, Vernier Céderic, Sauvageot Nicolas, Crichton Georgina E, Elias Merrill F
Luxembourg Health Institute L.I.H. (formerly Centre de Recherche Public Santé), Centre d'Etudes en Santé, Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg, Strassen, Luxembourg.
Luxembourg Health Institute L.I.H. (formerly Centre de Recherche Public Santé), Centre d'Etudes en Santé, Grand-Duchy of Luxembourg, Strassen, Luxembourg Nutritional Physiology Research Centre, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2015 May 11;5(5):e006814. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-006814.
This study aimed to examine the most important demographic and socioeconomic factors associated with diet quality, evaluated in terms of compliance with national dietary recommendations, selection of healthy and unhealthy food choices, energy density and food variety. We hypothesised that different demographic and socioeconomic factors may show disparate associations with diet quality.
A nationwide, cross-sectional, population-based study.
A total of 1352 apparently healthy and non-institutionalised subjects, aged 18-69 years, participated in the Observation of Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Luxembourg (ORISCAV-LUX) study in 2007-2008. The participants attended the nearest study centre after a telephone appointment, and were interviewed by trained research staff.
Diet quality as measured by 5 dietary indicators, namely, recommendation compliance index (RCI), recommended foods score (RFS), non-recommended foods score (non-RFS), energy density score (EDS), and dietary diversity score (DDS). The novel Correlated Component Regression (CCR) technique was used to determine the importance and magnitude of the association of each socioeconomic factor with diet quality, in a global analytic approach.
Increasing age, being male and living below the poverty threshold were predominant factors associated with eating a high energy density diet. Education level was an important factor associated with healthy and adequate food choices, whereas economic resources were predominant factors associated with food diversity and energy density.
Multiple demographic and socioeconomic circumstances were associated with different diet quality indicators. Efforts to improve diet quality for high-risk groups need an important public health focus.
本研究旨在探讨与饮食质量相关的最重要的人口统计学和社会经济因素,从符合国家饮食建议、健康和不健康食物选择、能量密度和食物种类等方面进行评估。我们假设不同的人口统计学和社会经济因素可能与饮食质量呈现不同的关联。
一项基于全国人口的横断面研究。
2007年至2008年,共有1352名年龄在18 - 69岁之间、看似健康且未入住机构的受试者参与了卢森堡心血管危险因素观察(ORISCAV - LUX)研究。参与者在电话预约后前往最近的研究中心,并接受经过培训的研究人员的访谈。
通过5项饮食指标衡量饮食质量,即建议依从指数(RCI)、推荐食物得分(RFS)、非推荐食物得分(非RFS)、能量密度得分(EDS)和饮食多样性得分(DDS)。采用新型相关成分回归(CCR)技术,以全局分析方法确定每个社会经济因素与饮食质量关联的重要性和程度。
年龄增长、男性以及生活在贫困线以下是与高能量密度饮食相关的主要因素。教育水平是与健康和充足食物选择相关的重要因素,而经济资源是与食物多样性和能量密度相关的主要因素。
多种人口统计学和社会经济情况与不同的饮食质量指标相关。针对高危人群改善饮食质量的努力需要重要的公共卫生关注重点。