Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Nutr Rev. 2017 Jun 1;75(6):391-404. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nux023.
Previous reviews have indicated that immigration from South Asian to Western countries leads to unhealthy changes in diet; however, these reviews have been limited by the methods used in some included studies. This critical narrative review summarizes findings from original research articles that performed appropriate statistical analyses on diet data obtained using culturally appropriate diet assessment measures. All studies quantitatively compared the diets of South Asian immigrants with those of residents of Western or South Asian countries or with those of South Asian immigrants who had varying periods of time since immigration. Most studies examined total energy and nutrient intake among adults. Total energy intake tended to decrease with increasing duration of residence and immigrant generation, and immigrants consumed less protein and monounsaturated fat compared with Westerners. However, findings for intakes of carbohydrate, total fat, saturated fat, polyunsaturated fat, and micronutrients were mixed. Studies that examine food group intake and include South Asians living in South Asia as a comparison population are needed.
先前的综述表明,南亚移民到西方国家会导致饮食不健康的变化;然而,这些综述受到了一些纳入研究中使用方法的限制。本批判性叙述性综述总结了使用文化适宜的饮食评估措施获得饮食数据并进行了适当的统计分析的原始研究文章的结果。所有研究都定量比较了南亚移民的饮食与西方国家或南亚国家居民的饮食,或与移民后居住时间不同的南亚移民的饮食。大多数研究都检测了成年人的总能量和营养素摄入。随着居住时间和移民代际的增加,总能量摄入趋于减少,与西方人相比,移民的蛋白质和单不饱和脂肪摄入量较少。然而,碳水化合物、总脂肪、饱和脂肪、多不饱和脂肪和微量营养素摄入量的结果则各不相同。需要研究食物组摄入量,并将生活在南亚的南亚人作为比较人群纳入研究。