Laskou Faidra, Bevilacqua Gregorio, Westbury Leo D, Bloom Ilse, Aggarwal Pritti, Cooper Cyrus, Patel Harnish P, Dennison Elaine
MRC Lifecourse Epidemiology Centre, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom.
NIHR Southampton Biomedical Research Centre, University of Southampton and University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust, Southampton, United Kingdom.
Front Nutr. 2023 Jan 13;9:988575. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2022.988575. eCollection 2022.
Adequate nutrition is important for health in later life. Older adults are especially vulnerable to adverse outcomes following infection by COVID-19 and have commonly spent a disproportionate time within their own homes to reduce risk of infection. There are concerns that advice to shield may have led to malnutrition as older adults may modify daily routines including usual shopping habits. The aims of this study were to report self-reported pandemic-related changes in diet and examine lifestyle and medical correlates of these changes in older UK community-dwelling adults.
We recruited 491 participants from the city of Southampton, UK. Participants completed a postal questionnaire in summer/autumn 2021, over a year after the first UK national lockdown was announced. The questionnaire ascertained demographic and lifestyle factors, in addition to number of comorbidities, nutrition risk scores, and presence of frailty. Associations between these participant characteristics in relation to self-reported changes in diet quality (lower, similar or higher when compared to before the first lockdown) were examined using ordinal logistic regression.
Median (lower quartile, upper quartile) age was 79.8 (77.0, 83.7) years. Overall, 11 (4.9%) men and 25 (9.4%) women had poorer diet quality compared to before the first UK lockdown. The following participant characteristics were associated with increased risk of being in a worse category for change in diet quality after adjustment for sex: lower educational attainment ( = 0.009); higher BMI ( < 0.001); higher DETERMINE (a malnutrition assessment) score ( = 0.004); higher SARC-F score ( = 0.013); and self-reported exhaustion in the previous week on at least 3 days ( = 0.002).
Individuals at higher nutritional risk were identified as reporting increased risk of deterioration in diet quality during the pandemic. Further investigation of the factors leading to these changes, and an understanding of whether they are reversible will be important, especially for future pandemic management.
充足的营养对晚年健康至关重要。老年人在感染新冠病毒后尤其容易出现不良后果,并且通常会在自己家中度过不成比例的时间以降低感染风险。有人担心,由于老年人可能会改变包括日常购物习惯在内的日常生活,因此自我隔离的建议可能导致营养不良。本研究的目的是报告自我报告的与疫情相关的饮食变化,并研究英国社区居住的老年成年人这些变化的生活方式和医学相关因素。
我们从英国南安普敦市招募了491名参与者。参与者于2021年夏/秋完成了一份邮寄问卷,此时距离英国首次全国封锁宣布已过去一年多。该问卷确定了人口统计学和生活方式因素,以及合并症数量、营养风险评分和虚弱情况。使用有序逻辑回归分析这些参与者特征与自我报告的饮食质量变化(与首次封锁前相比更低、相似或更高)之间的关联。
年龄中位数(下四分位数,上四分位数)为79.8(77.0,83.7)岁。总体而言,与英国首次封锁前相比,11名(4.9%)男性和25名(9.4%)女性的饮食质量较差。在对性别进行调整后,以下参与者特征与饮食质量变化处于较差类别风险增加相关:教育程度较低(P = 0.009);较高的体重指数(BMI)(P < 0.001);较高的DETERMINE(一种营养不良评估)评分(P = 0.004);较高的SARC - F评分(P = 0.013);以及自我报告在前一周至少有3天感到疲惫(P = 0.002)。
营养风险较高的个体被确定为在疫情期间报告饮食质量恶化风险增加。进一步调查导致这些变化的因素,以及了解它们是否可逆将很重要,特别是对于未来的疫情管理。