Health Analysis Division, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Ontario.
Health Rep. 2021 Aug 18;32(8):18-26. doi: 10.25318/82-003-x202100800003-eng.
Public health measures related to the COVID-19 pandemic have upended the way Canadians eat and shop for food. Since the pandemic began, many Canadians have reported consuming food away from home (FAFH) less often. FAFH tends to be less healthful than food prepared at home. Little is known about patterns of Canadians' FAFH consumption before the pandemic. This study used 2015 national-level nutrition data, the most recent available, to characterize patterns of FAFH consumption and selected markers of dietary intake.
National-level food intake data came from the first 24-hour dietary recall provided by 20,475 respondents aged 1 or older to the 2015 Canadian Community Health Survey-Nutrition. Mean daily intakes of selected food subgroups and nutrients, adjusted for total energy intake, were compared between those who had consumed any food in a restaurant on the previous day and those who had not. Estimates were generated overall and for eight age and sex groups.
In 2015, overall, 21.8% of Canadians had consumed FAFH in a restaurant on the previous day. Eating out was most common among males aged 19 to 54 (27.7%) and least common among young children aged 1 to 5 (8.4%). Compared with Canadians who had not eaten out on the previous day, those who had eaten out had consumed, on that day, fewer servings of whole fruit; whole grains; dark green and orange vegetables; other vegetables (excluding potatoes); milk and fortified soy-based beverages; and legumes, nuts and seeds, on average. Those who had eaten out had consumed, on average, less fibre and total sugar, and more total fat, saturated fat and sodium on that day. There were few differences for meat and poultry, fish and seafood, and protein intake.
On the day that Canadians ate out in a restaurant, their dietary intake was generally less favourable than that of Canadians who did not eat out. If Canadians continue to eat at home more and to consume less FAFH, as early pandemic-period reports suggest, then results can be used to gauge the potential dietary implications of these shifts.
与 COVID-19 大流行相关的公共卫生措施颠覆了加拿大人的饮食和购买食物的方式。自大流行开始以来,许多加拿大人报告称外出就餐(FAFH)的频率降低。FAFH 往往不如在家准备的食物健康。在大流行之前,人们对加拿大人 FAFH 消费模式知之甚少。本研究使用了 2015 年全国营养数据,这是最新的可用数据,以描述 FAFH 消费模式和选定的饮食摄入标志物。
国家层面的食物摄入数据来自 2015 年加拿大社区健康调查-营养的 20,475 名 1 岁或以上受访者提供的第一次 24 小时饮食回忆。在调整了总能量摄入后,比较了前一天在餐厅食用任何食物的人与未食用食物的人之间选定食物亚组和营养素的平均每日摄入量。总体和八个年龄和性别组进行了估计。
2015 年,总体而言,21.8%的加拿大人在前一天在餐厅吃过 FAFH。19 至 54 岁的男性外出就餐最为常见(27.7%),1 至 5 岁的幼儿最为少见(8.4%)。与前一天没有外出就餐的加拿大人相比,前一天外出就餐的人平均每天食用的全水果、全谷物、深绿色和橙色蔬菜、其他蔬菜(不包括土豆)、牛奶和强化大豆饮料以及豆类、坚果和种子的份量较少。外出就餐的人平均每天摄入的纤维和总糖较少,总脂肪、饱和脂肪和钠较多。肉类和家禽、鱼类和海鲜以及蛋白质摄入量的差异不大。
在加拿大人在餐厅外出就餐的那一天,他们的饮食摄入总体上不如那些不在餐厅就餐的加拿大人。如果像早期大流行期间的报告所建议的那样,加拿大人继续更多地在家就餐并减少 FAFH 的消费,那么结果可以用于衡量这些变化对潜在饮食的影响。