1MRC Epidemiology Unit,School of Clinical Medicine,Institute of Metabolic Science,University of Cambridge,Cambridge Biomedical Campus,Cambridge CB2 0QQ,UK.
Br J Nutr. 2018 Mar;119(6):685-694. doi: 10.1017/S0007114517003993.
High cost of healthy foods could be a barrier to healthy eating. We aimed to examine the association between dietary cost and adherence to the Mediterranean diet in a non-Mediterranean country. We evaluated cross-sectional data from 12 417 adults in the UK Fenland Study. Responses to 130-item FFQ were used to calculate a Mediterranean diet score (MDS). Dietary cost was estimated by matching food consumption data with retail prices of five major supermarkets. Using multivariable-adjusted linear regression, we examined the association of MDS and individual foods with dietary cost in absolute and relative scales. Subsequently, we assessed how much the association was explained by education, income, marital status and occupation, by conducting mediation analysis and testing interaction by these variables. High compared with low MDS (top to bottom third) was associated with marginally higher cost by 5·4 % (95 % CI 4·4, 6·4) or £0·20/d (95 % CI 0·16, 0·25). Participants with high adherence had higher cost associated with the healthier components (e.g. vegetables, fruits and fish), and lower cost associated with the unhealthy components (e.g. red meat, processed meat and sweets) (P for trend<0·001 each). In total, 20·7 % (95 % CI 14·3, 27·0) of the MDS-cost association was explained by the selected socio-economic factors, and the MDS-cost association was of greater magnitude in lower socio-economic groups (P interaction<0·005). Overall, greater adherence to the Mediterranean diet was associated with marginally higher dietary cost, partly modified and explained by socio-economic status, but the potential economic barriers of high adherence might be offset by cost saving from reducing unhealthy food consumption.
健康食品价格高昂可能成为健康饮食的障碍。我们旨在研究非地中海国家饮食成本与遵循地中海饮食模式之间的关联。我们评估了英国芬兰研究中 12417 名成年人的横断面数据。使用包含 130 个条目的 FFQ 来计算地中海饮食评分(MDS)。通过将食物消费数据与五家主要超市的零售价格相匹配来估算饮食成本。我们使用多变量调整线性回归分析,研究了 MDS 和个别食物与绝对和相对饮食成本之间的关联。随后,我们通过中介分析和检验这些变量的交互作用,评估了教育、收入、婚姻状况和职业对这种关联的解释程度。与低 MDS(最低到最高三分之一)相比,高 MDS 与边际上更高的成本相关,相差 5.4%(95%CI 4.4, 6.4)或 0.20 英镑/天(95%CI 0.16, 0.25)。高依从性与更健康的成分相关,成本更高(例如蔬菜、水果和鱼类),与不健康的成分相关,成本更低(例如红色肉类、加工肉类和甜食)(每种成分的趋势 P<0.001)。总体而言,所选社会经济因素解释了 MDS-成本关联的 20.7%(95%CI 14.3, 27.0),并且 MDS-成本关联在社会经济地位较低的群体中更为显著(交互作用 P<0.005)。总体而言,地中海饮食模式的更高依从性与边际上更高的饮食成本相关,部分受社会经济地位的修正和解释,但高依从性带来的潜在经济障碍可能会因减少不健康食品消费而节省成本得到弥补。