Department of Nutrition Science, School of Life Course Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences & Medicine, King's College London, Franklin Wilkins Building, 150 Stamford Street, London, SE1 9NH, UK.
Division of Birth Cohort Study, Guangzhou Women and Children's Medical Center, Guangzhou Medical University, Guangzhou, China.
Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2019 Feb 8;16(1):19. doi: 10.1186/s12966-019-0780-y.
Evidence on the relationship between fruit and vegetable consumption (FV) and mental health in adolescence is sparse and inconsistent. Social determinants of FV include ethnicity, family environments and economic disadvantage. We investigated the relationship between FV and mental health in the British multi-ethnic Determinants of Adolescents (now young Adult) Social well-being and Health (DASH) longitudinal study.
A longitudinal study of 4683 adolescents living in London at age 11-13 years and followed up at 14-16 years. FV was measured using validated questions on the number of portions consumed daily. Mental health was measured by the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire as mean Total Difficulties Score (TDS) and by classification as a 'probable clinical case' (TDS > 17). Social measures included ethnicity, parenting and socioeconomic circumstances. Multilevel modelling was used to investigate the association between FV and mental health throughout adolescence.
Low FV was common among adolescents, with approximately 60-70% of adolescents reporting < 5 portions/day and 20-30% reporting < 1 portion/day. In late adolescence, most ethnic minority groups reported lower FV than their White peers. In fully adjusted models, < 1 portion/day remained a significant correlate with mean TDS (Coef: 0.55, 0.29-0.81, P < 0.001) and TDS > 17 (Odds Ratio: 1.43, 1.11-1.85, P = 0.007). Gender- or ethnic-specific effects were not observed. Low parental care partly attenuated the association between FV and mental health.
Low FV is a longitudinal correlate of poor mental health across adolescence. A focus on FV in parenting interventions could yield interrelated benefits across developmental outcomes given its importance to both physical and socioemotional health.
关于水果和蔬菜摄入(FV)与青少年心理健康之间关系的证据很少且不一致。FV 的社会决定因素包括种族、家庭环境和经济劣势。我们在英国多民族青少年(现为年轻成年人)社会福利和健康(DASH)纵向研究中调查了 FV 与心理健康之间的关系。
对居住在伦敦的 4683 名 11-13 岁的青少年进行了一项纵向研究,并在 14-16 岁时进行了随访。FV 通过每天食用的份数的验证问题进行测量。心理健康通过 Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire 作为平均总困难评分(TDS)和作为“可能的临床病例”(TDS>17)的分类来衡量。社会措施包括种族、养育方式和社会经济状况。使用多层次模型调查了整个青春期 FV 与心理健康之间的关联。
青少年中低 FV 很常见,约 60-70%的青少年报告每天摄入<5 份,20-30%的青少年报告每天摄入<1 份。在青少年后期,大多数少数族裔群体报告的 FV 低于其白人同龄人。在完全调整的模型中,每天<1 份仍然与平均 TDS 呈显著相关(系数:0.55,0.29-0.81,P<0.001)和 TDS>17(优势比:1.43,1.11-1.85,P=0.007)。未观察到性别或族裔特异性影响。低父母关爱部分减弱了 FV 与心理健康之间的关联。
低 FV 是整个青春期心理健康不良的纵向相关因素。鉴于 FV 对身体和社会情感健康都很重要,在养育干预中关注 FV 可能会在发育结果方面产生相互关联的益处。