Division of Public Health Sciences, Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, 1100 Fairview Avenue North, M4B402, Seattle, WA 98109-1024, USA.
Departrment of Preventive Medicine, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, 680 North Lake Shore Drive #1400, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Prev Med. 2020 Oct;139:106234. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2020.106234. Epub 2020 Aug 12.
Older adults have physical and social barriers to eating but whether this affects functional status is unknown. We examined associations between eating barriers and physical function in the Women's Health Initiative (WHI). In 2012-14, a subset of alive and participating women (n = 5910) completed an in-home examination including the Short Physical Performance Battery (SPPB) (grip strength, balance, timed walking speed, chair stand). WHI participants complete annual mailed questionnaires; the 2013-14 questionnaire included items on eating alone, eating < two meals/day, dentition problems affecting eating, physical difficulties with cooking/shopping and monetary resources for food. Linear regression tested associations of these eating barriers with SPPB, adjusting for BMI, age, race/ethnicity, and medical multimorbidities. Over half (56.8%) of participants were ≥ 75 years, 98.8% had a BMI ≥ 25.0 kg/m and 66% had multimorbidities. Eating barriers, excluding eating alone, were associated with significantly lower total (all p < .001) and component-specific, multivariate-adjusted SPPB scores (all p < .05). Compared to no barriers, eating < two meals/day (7.83 vs. 8.38, p < .0002), dentition problems (7.69 vs. 8.38, p < .0001), inability to shop/prepare meals (7.74 vs. 8.38, p < .0001) and insufficient resources (7.84 vs. 8.37 p < .001) were significantly associated with multivariate-adjusted mean SPPB score < 8. Models additionally adjusting for Healthy Eating Index-2010 had little influence on scores. As barriers increased, scores declined further for grip strength (16.10 kg for 4-5 barriers, p = .001), timed walk (0.58 m/s for 4-5 barriers, p = .001) and total SPPB (7.27 for 4-5 barriers, p < .0001). In conclusion, in this WHI subset, eating barriers were associated with poor SPPB scores.
老年人在进食方面存在身体和社会障碍,但这是否会影响其功能状态尚不清楚。我们研究了饮食障碍与妇女健康倡议(WHI)中身体功能之间的关联。在 2012-14 年,一组在世且参与的女性(n=5910)完成了一项家庭检查,包括短体物理性能电池(SPPB)(握力、平衡、定时行走速度、椅子站立)。WHI 参与者每年完成邮寄问卷;2013-14 年的问卷包括独自进食、每天进食少于两餐、影响进食的牙齿问题、烹饪/购物的身体困难和食物的货币资源等项目。线性回归测试了这些饮食障碍与 SPPB 的关联,调整了 BMI、年龄、种族/民族和医疗多病。超过一半(56.8%)的参与者年龄≥75 岁,98.8%的 BMI≥25.0kg/m,66%的人有多病。除了独自进食外,其他饮食障碍与总 SPPB 评分(所有 p<0.001)和多变量调整后的特定组件 SPPB 评分显著降低相关(所有 p<0.05)。与无障碍相比,每天进食少于两餐(7.83 与 8.38,p<0.0002)、牙齿问题(7.69 与 8.38,p<0.0001)、无法购物/准备饭菜(7.74 与 8.38,p<0.0001)和资源不足(7.84 与 8.37,p<0.001)与多变量调整后的 SPPB 评分<8 显著相关。此外,调整健康饮食指数-2010 对分数几乎没有影响。随着障碍的增加,握力(4-5 个障碍为 16.10kg,p=0.001)、定时行走(4-5 个障碍为 0.58m/s,p=0.001)和总 SPPB(4-5 个障碍为 7.27,p<0.0001)的分数进一步下降。总之,在这个 WHI 子集中,饮食障碍与 SPPB 评分较差有关。