Population Health Innovation Lab, Department of Public Health, Environments and Society, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, LondonWC1H 9SH, UK.
Sciensano (Scientific Insitute of Public Health), 14 Juliette Wytsmanstraat, 1050 Brussels, Belgium.
Public Health Nutr. 2021 May;24(7):1583-1594. doi: 10.1017/S1368980020005029. Epub 2020 Dec 15.
To examine socio-economic inequalities in decreases in household sugar purchasing in Great Britain (GB).
Longitudinal, population-based study.
Data were obtained from the GB Kantar Fast-Moving Consumer Goods (FMCG) panel (2014-2017), a nationally representative panel study of food and beverages bought and brought into the home. We estimated changes in daily sugar purchases by occupational social grade from twenty-three food groups, using generalised estimating equations (household-level clustering).
British households who regularly reported food and beverages to the GB Kantar FMCG (n 28 033).
We found that lower social grades obtained a lower proportion of sugar from healthier foods and a greater proportion of sugar from less healthy foods and beverages. In 2014, differences in daily sugar purchased between the lowest and the highest social grades were 3·9 g/capita/d (95 % CI 2·9, 4·8) for table sugar, 2·4 g (95 % CI 1·8, 3·1) for sugar-sweetened beverages, 2·2 g (95 % CI 1·5, 2·8) for chocolate and confectionery and 1·0 g (95 % CI 0·7, 1·3) for biscuits. Conversely, the lowest social grade purchased less sugar from fruits (2·1 g (95 % CI 1·5, 2·8)) and vegetables (0·7 g (95 % CI 0·5, 0·8)) than the highest social grade. We found little evidence of change in social grade differences between 2014 and 2017. These results suggest that recent overall declines in sugar purchases are largely equally distributed across socio-economic groups.
This suggests that recent population-level policy activity to reduce sugar consumption in GB does not appear to exacerbate or reduce existing socio-economic inequalities in sugar purchasing. Low agency, population-level policies may be the best solution to improving population diet without increasing inequalities.
研究英国(GB)家庭购买糖量减少方面的社会经济不平等现象。
纵向、基于人群的研究。
数据来自 GB 坎塔尔快速消费品(FMCG)面板(2014-2017 年),这是一项全国代表性的家庭食品和饮料购买和带入家庭的面板研究。我们使用广义估计方程(家庭层面聚类),从 23 种食品组中估计职业社会等级对每日糖购买量的变化。
经常向 GB 坎塔尔 FMCG 报告食品和饮料的英国家庭(n=28033)。
我们发现,较低的社会等级从更健康的食物中获得的糖比例较低,而从较不健康的食物和饮料中获得的糖比例较高。2014 年,最低和最高社会等级之间每日糖摄入量的差异为:餐桌糖 3.9 克/人/天(95%可信区间为 2.9,4.8),含糖饮料 2.4 克(95%可信区间为 1.8,3.1),巧克力和糖果 2.2 克(95%可信区间为 1.5,2.8),饼干 1.0 克(95%可信区间为 0.7,1.3)。相反,最低社会等级购买的水果(2.1 克(95%可信区间为 1.5,2.8))和蔬菜(0.7 克(95%可信区间为 0.5,0.8))比最高社会等级少。我们发现 2014 年至 2017 年期间社会等级差异变化的证据很少。这些结果表明,最近英国整体糖购买量的下降在社会经济群体中基本均衡分布。
这表明,最近英国为减少糖消费而开展的人群层面政策活动似乎并没有加剧或减少糖购买方面现有的社会经济不平等现象。低代理、人群层面的政策可能是改善人群饮食而不增加不平等现象的最佳解决方案。