Department of Global Community Health and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA.
Department of Biostatistics, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2019 May 1;109(5):1414-1421. doi: 10.1093/ajcn/nqy347.
In 2009, for the first time since the program's inception in 1974, the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) changed their food packages, providing food options better aligned with the 2005 Dietary Guidelines for Americans.
The aim of this study was to evaluate whether the 2009 WIC food package change was associated with changes in growth trajectories from age 0 to 4 y or obesity at age 4 among children who participated in WIC in Los Angeles County between 2003 and 2016.
Children were grouped into 1 of 4 exposure groups: full-dose, new food package group (participating in WIC from birth to age 4, post 2009, N = 70,120), full-dose, old food package group (participating from birth to age 4, pre 2009, N = 85,871), late-dose, new food package group (participating from age 2 to 4 y, post 2009, N = 8386), and late-dose, old food package group (participating from age 2 to 4 y, pre 2009, N = 18,241). Children were matched across groups on gender, race/ethnicity, maternal education and language, family income, and initial weight status, and matched analyses were performed. Longitudinal growth trajectories were modeled using piecewise linear spline mixed models, and differences in obesity at age 4 were compared using Poisson regression models.
Children receiving a full dose of the new food package had healthier growth trajectories and a lower obesity risk at age 4 than children receiving a full dose of the old food package (RR [95% CI]: 0.88 [0.86, 0.91] for boys, 0.90 [0.87, 0.93] for girls). Boys, but not girls, in the late-dose, new food package group had a lower obesity risk at age 4 compared with boys in the late-dose, old food package group (RR = 0.89, 95% CI = 0.81, 0.98).
The WIC food package change appears to be associated with improved childhood obesity outcomes. These findings are important in informing policymakers considering further improvements to the WIC food packages.
2009 年,特殊补充营养计划(WIC)自 1974 年成立以来首次改变了其食品包,提供了与 2005 年美国人饮食指南更一致的食品选择。
本研究旨在评估 2009 年 WIC 食品包的变化是否与 2003 年至 2016 年期间在洛杉矶县参加 WIC 的儿童从 0 岁到 4 岁的生长轨迹变化或 4 岁时肥胖有关。
儿童被分为 4 个暴露组之一:全剂量、新食品包组(从出生到 4 岁参加 WIC,2009 年后,N=70120)、全剂量、旧食品包组(从出生到 4 岁参加 WIC,2009 年前,N=85871)、晚剂量、新食品包组(2 岁至 4 岁参加 WIC,2009 年后,N=8386)和晚剂量、旧食品包组(2 岁至 4 岁参加 WIC,2009 年前,N=18241)。在性别、种族/民族、母亲教育和语言、家庭收入以及初始体重状况方面,对各组儿童进行了匹配,并进行了匹配分析。使用分段线性样条混合模型对纵向生长轨迹进行建模,并使用泊松回归模型比较 4 岁时肥胖的差异。
接受新食品全剂量的儿童生长轨迹更为健康,4 岁时肥胖风险低于接受旧食品全剂量的儿童(男孩,RR[95%CI]:0.88[0.86,0.91];女孩,0.90[0.87,0.93])。与晚剂量、旧食品包组的男孩相比,晚剂量、新食品包组的男孩 4 岁时肥胖风险较低(RR=0.89,95%CI=0.81,0.98)。
WIC 食品包的变化似乎与改善儿童肥胖结果有关。这些发现对于决策者考虑进一步改进 WIC 食品包非常重要。