Urban Lorien E, Weber Judith L, Heyman Melvin B, Schichtl Rachel L, Verstraete Sofia, Lowery Nina S, Das Sai Krupa, Schleicher Molly M, Rogers Gail, Economos Christina, Masters William A, Roberts Susan B
J Acad Nutr Diet. 2016 Apr;116(4):590-8.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.jand.2015.11.009. Epub 2016 Jan 20.
Excess energy intake from meals consumed away from home is implicated as a major contributor to obesity, and ∼50% of US restaurants are individual or small-chain (non-chain) establishments that do not provide nutrition information.
To measure the energy content of frequently ordered meals in non-chain restaurants in three US locations, and compare with the energy content of meals from large-chain restaurants, energy requirements, and food database information.
A multisite random-sampling protocol was used to measure the energy contents of the most frequently ordered meals from the most popular cuisines in non-chain restaurants, together with equivalent meals from large-chain restaurants.
Meals were obtained from restaurants in San Francisco, CA; Boston, MA; and Little Rock, AR, between 2011 and 2014.
Meal energy content determined by bomb calorimetry.
Regional and cuisine differences were assessed using a mixed model with restaurant nested within region×cuisine as the random factor. Paired t tests were used to evaluate differences between non-chain and chain meals, human energy requirements, and food database values.
Meals from non-chain restaurants contained 1,205±465 kcal/meal, amounts that were not significantly different from equivalent meals from large-chain restaurants (+5.1%; P=0.41). There was a significant effect of cuisine on non-chain meal energy, and three of the four most popular cuisines (American, Italian, and Chinese) had the highest mean energy (1,495 kcal/meal). Ninety-two percent of meals exceeded typical energy requirements for a single eating occasion.
Non-chain restaurants lacking nutrition information serve amounts of energy that are typically far in excess of human energy requirements for single eating occasions, and are equivalent to amounts served by the large-chain restaurants that have previously been criticized for providing excess energy. Restaurants in general, rather than specific categories of restaurant, expose patrons to excessive portions that induce overeating through established biological mechanisms.
外出就餐时摄入的过多能量被认为是导致肥胖的主要因素,并且美国约50%的餐厅是不提供营养信息的个体或小连锁(非连锁)企业。
测量美国三个地点非连锁餐厅中常点餐食的能量含量,并与大型连锁餐厅餐食的能量含量、能量需求以及食物数据库信息进行比较。
采用多地点随机抽样方案,测量非连锁餐厅中最受欢迎的几种菜系里常点餐食的能量含量,以及大型连锁餐厅的同等餐食。
2011年至2014年期间,从加利福尼亚州旧金山、马萨诸塞州波士顿和阿肯色州小石城的餐厅获取餐食。
通过弹式量热法测定餐食的能量含量。
使用混合模型评估区域和菜系差异,其中餐厅嵌套在区域×菜系中作为随机因素。采用配对t检验评估非连锁和连锁餐食、人体能量需求以及食物数据库值之间的差异。
非连锁餐厅的餐食每份含有1205±465千卡能量,与大型连锁餐厅的同等餐食相比无显著差异(高5.1%;P = 0.41)。菜系对非连锁餐食能量有显著影响,四种最受欢迎的菜系中有三种(美式、意大利式和中式)平均能量最高(每份1495千卡)。92%的餐食超过了单次用餐的典型能量需求。
缺乏营养信息的非连锁餐厅提供的能量通常远远超过单次用餐的人体能量需求,并且与之前因提供过多能量而受到批评的大型连锁餐厅提供的能量相当。一般来说,餐厅而非特定类型的餐厅,会让顾客接触到过量食物,这些食物通过既定的生物学机制导致暴饮暴食。