Mackenbach Joreintje D, Burgoine Thomas, Lakerveld Jeroen, Forouhi Nita G, Griffin Simon J, Wareham Nicholas J, Monsivais Pablo
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, VU Medical Center Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
UKCRC Centre for Diet and Activity Research (CEDAR), MRC Epidemiology Unit, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Institute of Metabolic Science, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Am J Prev Med. 2017 Jul;53(1):55-62. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.01.044. Epub 2017 Mar 20.
It is unknown whether there is an interplay of affordability (economic accessibility) and proximity (geographic accessibility) of supermarkets in relation to having a Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH)-accordant diet.
Data (collected: 2005-2015, analyzed: 2016) were from the cross-sectional, population-based Fenland Study cohort: 9,274 adults aged 29-64 years, living in Cambridgeshire, United Kingdom. Dietary quality was evaluated using an index of DASH dietary accordance, based on recorded consumption of foods and beverages in a validated 130-item, semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire. DASH accordance was defined as a DASH score in the top quintile. Dietary costs (£/day) were estimated by attributing a food price variable to the foods consumed according to the questionnaire. Individuals were classified as having low-, medium-, or high-cost diets. Supermarket affordability was determined based on the cost of a 101-item market basket. Distances between home address to the nearest supermarket (geographic accessibility) and nearest economically-appropriate supermarket (economic accessibility) were divided into tertiles.
Higher-cost diets were more likely to be DASH-accordant. After adjustment for key demographics and exposure to other food outlets, individuals with lowest economic accessibility to supermarkets had lower odds of being DASH-accordant (OR=0.59, 95% CI=0.52, 0.68) than individuals with greatest economic accessibility. This association was stronger than with geographic accessibility alone (OR=0.85, 95% CI=0.74, 0.98).
Results suggest that geographic and economic access to food should be taken into account when considering approaches to promote adherence to healthy diets for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases and other chronic disease.
关于超市的可承受性(经济可及性)和距离(地理可及性)与采用终止高血压膳食方法(DASH)一致饮食之间是否存在相互作用尚不清楚。
数据(收集时间:2005 - 2015年,分析时间:2016年)来自基于人群的横断面芬兰研究队列:9274名年龄在29 - 64岁的成年人,居住在英国剑桥郡。使用DASH膳食一致性指数评估饮食质量,该指数基于一份经过验证的130项半定量食物频率问卷中记录的食物和饮料消费情况。DASH一致性被定义为DASH评分处于最高五分位数。通过根据问卷将食物价格变量归因于所消费的食物来估算饮食成本(英镑/天)。个体被分为低、中、高成本饮食。超市的可承受性基于一个101项商品购物篮的成本来确定。家庭住址到最近超市(地理可及性)和最近经济适用超市(经济可及性)之间的距离被分为三分位数。
成本较高的饮食更有可能符合DASH饮食。在对关键人口统计学因素和接触其他食品销售点进行调整后,与超市经济可及性最高的个体相比,超市经济可及性最低的个体符合DASH饮食的几率更低(OR = 0.59,95%CI = 0.52,0.68)。这种关联比仅与地理可及性的关联更强(OR = 0.85,95%CI = 0.74,0.98)。
结果表明,在考虑促进坚持健康饮食以预防心血管疾病和其他慢性病的方法时,应考虑食物的地理和经济可及性。