Gasser Constantine E, Kerr Jessica A, Mensah Fiona K, Wake Melissa
1Centre for Community Child Health,Murdoch Childrens Research Institute,Royal Children's Hospital,50 Flemington Road,Parkville, VIC 3052,Australia.
2Department of Paediatrics,University of Melbourne,Royal Children's Hospital,50 Flemington Road,Parkville, VIC 3052,Australia.
Br J Nutr. 2017 Apr;117(8):1137-1150. doi: 10.1017/S0007114517000897. Epub 2017 May 8.
This study aimed to derive and compare longitudinal trajectories of dietary scores and patterns from 2-3 to 10-11 years and from 4-5 to 14-15 years of age. In waves two to six of the Baby (B) Cohort and one to six of the Kindergarten (K) Cohort of the population-based Longitudinal Study of Australian Children, parents or children reported biennially on the study child's consumption of twelve to sixteen healthy and less healthy food or drink items for the previous 24 h. For each wave, we derived a dietary score from 0 to 14, based on the 2013 Australian Dietary Guidelines (higher scores indicating healthier diet). We then used factor analyses to empirically derive dietary patterns for separate waves. Using group-based trajectory modelling, we generated trajectories of dietary scores and empirical patterns in 4504 B and 4640 K Cohort children. Four similar trajectories of dietary scores emerged for the B and K Cohorts, containing comparable proportions of children in each cohort: 'never healthy' (8·8 and 11·9 %, respectively), 'moderately healthy' (24·0 and 20·7 %), 'becoming less healthy' (16·6 and 27·3 %) and 'always healthy' (50·7 and 40·2 %). Deriving trajectories based on dietary patterns, rather than dietary scores, produced similar findings. For 'becoming less healthy' trajectories, dietary quality appeared to worsen from 7 years of age in both cohorts. In conclusion, a brief dietary measure administered repeatedly across childhood generated robust, nuanced dietary trajectories that were replicable across two cohorts and two methodologies. These trajectories appear ideal for future research into dietary determinants and health outcomes.
本研究旨在推导并比较2至3岁至10至11岁以及4至5岁至14至15岁年龄段饮食评分和模式的纵向轨迹。在基于人群的澳大利亚儿童纵向研究的婴儿(B)队列的第二至六波以及幼儿园(K)队列的第一至六波中,父母或儿童每两年报告一次研究儿童在前24小时内对12至16种健康和不太健康的食品或饮料的消费情况。对于每一波,我们根据2013年澳大利亚饮食指南得出了从0到14的饮食评分(分数越高表明饮食越健康)。然后,我们使用因子分析从经验上推导各波的饮食模式。使用基于群体的轨迹模型,我们在4504名B队列儿童和4640名K队列儿童中生成了饮食评分和经验模式的轨迹。B队列和K队列出现了四条相似的饮食评分轨迹,每个队列中各轨迹包含的儿童比例相当:“从不健康”(分别为8.8%和11.9%)、“中度健康”(24.0%和20.7%)、“变得不太健康”(16.6%和27.3%)以及“一直健康”(50.7%和40.2%)。基于饮食模式而非饮食评分推导轨迹得出了相似的结果。对于“变得不太健康”的轨迹,两个队列的饮食质量似乎从7岁起开始恶化。总之,在整个童年期反复进行的一项简短饮食测量产生了稳健、细致入微且可在两个队列和两种方法中重复的饮食轨迹。这些轨迹似乎非常适合未来关于饮食决定因素和健康结果的研究。