School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z3, Canada.
Cancer Control Research, BC Cancer, Vancouver, BC V5Z 1L3, Canada.
Nutrients. 2020 Oct 21;12(10):3217. doi: 10.3390/nu12103217.
An understanding of relationships between different constructs of the neighbourhood environment and diet quality is needed to inform public health interventions. This study investigated associations between material deprivation, social deprivation and population density with diet quality in a cohort of 19,973 Canadian adults aged 35 to 69 years within the Atlantic PATH cohort study. Diet quality, a metric of how well diet conforms to recommendations was determined from a 24-item food frequency questionnaire. Neighbourhood environment data were derived from dissemination area level Census data. Two deprivation indices were evaluated: material and social deprivation, which reflect access to goods and amenities and social relationships. Multi-level models were used to estimate relationships (mean differences and 95% CI) between neighbourhood environment and diet quality, adjusting for covariates. Mean diet quality was lower in the most socially deprived neighbourhoods compared to the least socially deprived: -0.56, 95% CI (-0.88, -0.25). Relationships between diet quality and population density differed between urban and rural areas (-interaction < 0.0001). In rural areas, diet quality was higher in intermediate-density neighbourhoods: 0.54, 95% CI (0.05, 1.03). In urban areas, diet quality was lower in intermediate-density and the most-dense neighbourhoods: -0.84, 95% CI (-1.28, -0.40) and -0.72, 95% CI (-1.20, -0.25). Our findings suggest socially deprived and high-density neighbourhoods are associated with lower diet quality and possible urban-rural differences in neighbourhood environment-diet quality relationships. Additional studies are needed to determine the temporal nature of relationships and whether differences in diet quality are meaningful.
了解邻里环境的不同结构与饮食质量之间的关系对于公共卫生干预至关重要。本研究在大西洋 PATH 队列研究中,调查了加拿大 35 至 69 岁的 19973 名成年人中,物质贫困、社会贫困和人口密度与饮食质量之间的关联。饮食质量是衡量饮食与建议吻合程度的指标,通过 24 项食物频率问卷来确定。邻里环境数据来自传播区域层面的人口普查数据。评估了两种贫困指数:物质贫困和社会贫困,反映了获得商品和便利设施以及社会关系的程度。使用多层次模型来估计邻里环境与饮食质量之间的关系(平均值差异和 95%置信区间),同时调整了协变量。与最不贫困的邻里环境相比,最贫困的邻里环境中的饮食质量较低:-0.56,95%置信区间(-0.88,-0.25)。饮食质量与人口密度之间的关系在城市和农村地区有所不同(-交互作用<0.0001)。在农村地区,中等密度邻里环境中的饮食质量更高:0.54,95%置信区间(0.05,1.03)。在城市地区,中等密度和最密集的邻里环境中的饮食质量较低:-0.84,95%置信区间(-1.28,-0.40)和-0.72,95%置信区间(-1.20,-0.25)。我们的研究结果表明,社会贫困和高密度的邻里环境与较低的饮食质量有关,并且邻里环境-饮食质量关系可能存在城乡差异。需要进一步的研究来确定这些关系的时间性质以及饮食质量的差异是否有意义。