School of Population and Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
BC Children's Hospital Research Institute, Vancouver, Canada.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2019 May;54(5):567-578. doi: 10.1007/s00127-018-1616-9. Epub 2018 Oct 23.
Mental illness represents a major public health burden among Canada's large immigrant population. A burgeoning cross-sectional, longitudinal, and experimental evidence base implicates nutrition in mental health. Healthier diets (e.g., those rich in certain micro-nutrients) may benefit cognitive, social, and emotional functioning through attenuated inflammation and other bio-psychological pathways. The present study examined associations between nutrition and three markers of mental health among immigrants to Canada.
Employing cross-sectional data from immigrant respondents (n = 37,071) to a nationally representative population-based survey (the Canadian Community Health Survey: CCHS 2011-2014), we modelled associations of daily fruit and vegetable consumption with three mental health outcomes: anxiety and/or mood disorder diagnosis, being distressed (assessed via the 6-item Kessler Psychological Distress Scale), and having good self-rated overall mental health. Multivariable logistic regression analyses were employed, adjusting for various socio-demographic and lifestyle-related variables.
Higher consumption of fruit and vegetables demonstrated significant, protective associations with odds of having a mood and/or anxiety disorder, being distressed, and self-rated good mental health. Such patterns of association were similar regardless of ethno-cultural minority status and recency of immigration. Moreover, the protective associations of nutrition and mental health were independent of socio-demographic, health, and lifestyle factors.
Results suggested evidence of protective associations between healthy nutritional intake and mental illness among a large-scale sample of immigrants in Canada. Importantly, the protective associations of healthier diets with immigrants' mental health were independent of various markers of healthy lifestyles (e.g., general health status, physical activity, alcohol use). Healthy dietary intake may, therefore, be worth consideration in efforts to prevent mental illness among immigrants.
精神疾病是加拿大庞大移民群体面临的主要公共卫生负担之一。越来越多的横断面、纵向和实验证据表明,营养与精神健康有关。更健康的饮食(例如富含某些微量营养素的饮食)可能通过减轻炎症和其他生物心理途径,有益于认知、社交和情绪功能。本研究探讨了加拿大移民的营养与三种心理健康指标之间的关系。
利用一项全国代表性的基于人群的调查(加拿大社区健康调查:CCHS 2011-2014)中移民受访者(n=37071)的横断面数据,我们通过多变量逻辑回归分析,对每天水果和蔬菜摄入量与三种心理健康结果进行建模:焦虑和/或情绪障碍诊断、感到苦恼(通过 6 项 Kessler 心理困扰量表评估)和自我评估的整体心理健康状况良好。调整了各种社会人口统计学和与生活方式相关的变量。
较高的水果和蔬菜摄入量与患有情绪和/或焦虑障碍、感到苦恼和自我评估良好的心理健康状况的几率呈显著保护相关。无论少数族裔地位和移民时间长短如何,这种关联模式都相似。此外,营养与心理健康之间的保护关联独立于社会人口统计学、健康和生活方式因素。
结果表明,在加拿大大规模移民样本中,健康营养摄入与精神疾病之间存在保护关联的证据。重要的是,更健康的饮食与移民心理健康之间的保护关联独立于各种健康生活方式的标志物(例如,一般健康状况、身体活动、饮酒)。因此,在预防移民精神疾病方面,健康饮食可能值得考虑。