Park Sohyun, Lundeen Elizabeth A, Pan Liping, Blanck Heidi M
1 Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity and Obesity, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA.
Am J Health Promot. 2018 Jul;32(6):1402-1408. doi: 10.1177/0890117117717381. Epub 2017 Jun 30.
This study examined associations between knowledge of sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB)-related health conditions and SSB intake among US adults.
Quantitative, cross-sectional study.
The 2014 SummerStyles survey data for 4163 US adults (≥18 years) were used.
The outcome measure was frequency of SSB intake (regular soda, fruit drinks, sports or energy drinks, sweetened coffee/tea drinks). Exposure measures were knowledge of 6 SSB-related health conditions: weight gain, diabetes, cavities, high cholesterol, heart disease, and hypertension.
Six logistic regression models were used to estimate adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for consuming SSBs ≥2 times/d according to knowledge of SSB-related health conditions.
Overall, 37.8% of adults reported consuming SSBs ≥2 times/d. Although most adults identified that weight gain (80.2%), diabetes (73.6%), and cavities (71.8%) are related to drinking SSBs, fewer adults identified high cholesterol (24.1%), heart disease (31.5%), and hypertension (33.0%) as being related to drinking SSBs. Crude analyses indicated that lower SSB intake was significantly associated with knowledge of the associations between SSBs and weight gain, diabetes, cavities, and heart disease. However, after adjustment for covariates, only lack of knowledge of the association between heart disease and SSBs was significantly associated with consuming SSBs ≥2 times/d (OR = 1.29) than non-SSB consumers.
The finding that knowledge of SSB-related health conditions, in general, was not associated with high SSB intake suggests that knowledge on SSB-related health conditions alone may not be sufficient for adult behavior change.
本研究调查了美国成年人中与含糖饮料(SSB)相关健康状况的知识与SSB摄入量之间的关联。
定量横断面研究。
使用了2014年针对4163名美国成年人(≥18岁)的夏季风尚调查数据。
结果指标是SSB摄入量的频率(常规苏打水、果汁饮料、运动或能量饮料、加糖咖啡/茶饮料)。暴露指标是对6种与SSB相关健康状况的了解:体重增加、糖尿病、龋齿、高胆固醇、心脏病和高血压。
使用六个逻辑回归模型,根据对与SSB相关健康状况的了解来估计每天饮用SSB≥2次的调整优势比(OR)。
总体而言,37.8%的成年人报告每天饮用SSB≥2次。尽管大多数成年人认为体重增加(80.2%)、糖尿病(73.6%)和龋齿(