Department of Food, Nutrition & Dietetics, Sir Vithaldas Thackersey College of Home Science (Autonomous), SNDT Women's University, Santacruz West, Mumbai, 400049, Maharashtra, India.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Jun 6;22(1):1129. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13449-6.
Unhealthy snacking habits in adolescents are typically triggered by obesogenic food environments and possibly perpetuated through interactions between socio-environmental factors and personal perceptions, attitudes, and motivations to change eating behaviors. This study attempted to address the knowledge gap regarding the association of intrapersonal, socioeconomic, and food environmental characteristics with unhealthy snack consumption in Indian adolescents, presenting several targets for effective interventions.
A representative sample of 10-12 years old adolescents (n 712) completed a cross-sectional survey including eating habits, characteristics of school and home food environments, and perceptions related to affordability, convenience, and barriers within the food environments. The frequency of unhealthy snack consumption was assessed using a validated qualitative food frequency questionnaire. Multivariate regression analyses determined the associated factors of unhealthy snack consumption in adolescents attending private and public schools.
The mean age of adolescents was 10.9 (1.1) years, 48.2% were girls and 53.9% attended private schools. The most frequently consumed unhealthy snacks were biscuits/ cookies (5.2d/wk) followed by wafers (3.4d/wk) and Indian fried snacks- samosa/ vada pav (2.8 d/wk). Among the public-school adolescents, the odds of unhealthy snack consumption were 0.89 times lower when meals were had frequently at the dinner table and 4.97 times higher when the perceived barriers related to the affordability of healthy snacks were greater. Maternal education (OR 0.78, 95% CI 0.66-0.82, p < 0.001), family income (OR 2.15, 95% CI 1.98-2.32, p < 0.001), availability of unhealthy snacks (OR 2.98, 95% CI 1.36-3.46, p < 0.001) and fruits (OR 0.57, 95% CI 0.49-0.69, p < 0.001) at home, having evening meals together (OR 0.71, 95% CI 0.63-0.81, p 0.031), and perceived parental control during mealtimes (OR 0.67, 95% CI 0.62-0.72, p < 0.001) were associated with unhealthy snack consumption in adolescents attending private schools.
The results highlighted a pervasiveness of unhealthy snacks in adolescents' food environments. Improving provisions and affordability of fruits and healthy snacks at schools, encouraging family mealtimes, and limiting the availability of unhealthy snacks at home whilst addressing the perceived barriers within food environments, and inculcating self-efficacy skills can improve snacking habits in Indian adolescents, irrespective of socioeconomic backgrounds.
青少年的不健康零食习惯通常是由肥胖环境引发的,并且可能通过社会环境因素与个人对改变饮食习惯的看法、态度和动机之间的相互作用而持续存在。本研究试图解决与印度青少年的个人、社会经济和食物环境特征与不健康零食消费相关的知识差距,为有效干预提供了多个目标。
一个代表性的 10-12 岁青少年样本(n=712)完成了一项横断面调查,其中包括饮食习惯、学校和家庭食物环境特征以及与食物环境中可负担性、便利性和障碍相关的看法。使用经过验证的定性食物频率问卷评估了不健康零食的消费频率。多变量回归分析确定了在私立和公立学校上学的青少年中与不健康零食消费相关的因素。
青少年的平均年龄为 10.9(1.1)岁,48.2%是女孩,53.9%就读于私立学校。最常食用的不健康零食是饼干/曲奇(每周 5.2 次),其次是威化饼(每周 3.4 次)和印度炸小吃-三角包/帕夫(每周 2.8 次)。在公立学校的青少年中,当晚餐经常在餐桌上食用时,不健康零食消费的几率降低 0.89 倍,而当与健康零食的可负担性相关的感知障碍更大时,不健康零食消费的几率增加 4.97 倍。母亲教育(OR 0.78,95%CI 0.66-0.82,p<0.001)、家庭收入(OR 2.15,95%CI 1.98-2.32,p<0.001)、不健康零食的可获得性(OR 2.98,95%CI 1.36-3.46,p<0.001)和水果(OR 0.57,95%CI 0.49-0.69,p<0.001)在家中,一起吃晚餐(OR 0.71,95%CI 0.63-0.81,p=0.031),以及在进餐时感知到的父母控制(OR 0.67,95%CI 0.62-0.72,p<0.001)与私立学校青少年的不健康零食消费相关。
研究结果强调了青少年食物环境中存在大量不健康零食的现象。改善学校水果和健康零食的供应和可负担性,鼓励家庭用餐,并限制家中不健康零食的供应,同时解决食物环境中的感知障碍,并培养自我效能技能,可以改善印度青少年的零食习惯,而不论其社会经济背景如何。