The Brattle Group, Boston, MA, U.S..
Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, U.S.
J Nutr. 2024 Apr;154(4):1356-1367. doi: 10.1016/j.tjnut.2023.11.010. Epub 2023 Nov 19.
Beginning in 1977, the U.S. Government began formally issuing dietary advice, a main objective of which was to reduce and prevent the prevalence of obesity in the American population. Concurrently, the Harvard School of Public Health began conducting dietary intake surveys and collecting body mass index (BMI) (kg/m) data on female nurses in the Nurses' Health Study I (NHSI) and II (NHSII).
We aimed to assess whether compliance with the nutrition guidance from the U.S. Government to restrict dietary intake regarding total fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol was meaningfully associated with the prevalence of obesity.
We analyzed nutrition survey data from 1980 to 2011, grouping the sample into "compliers," those who complied with guidance on the intake of total fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol, and "noncompliers," those who did not. We then compared the means, medians, and distributions of BMI for compliers and noncompliers over the period for both the full survey population and an age-controlled sample. Finally, we plotted raw NHS data to examine respondents' Fat Proportion intake of energy and concurrent BMI.
The mean and median BMI for both compliers and noncompliers increased throughout the sample period, and the BMI distributions shifted toward obese and severely obese overall and for an age-controlled subset compared with the 1980 NHSI and 1990 NHSII baselines. Compliers had slightly lower mean BMI increases than noncompliers but saw a relatively higher increase in the growth of the prevalence of those with BMI >30. We also found no linear relationship between Fat Proportion of energy intake and concurrent BMI.
Guidance from the U.S. Government to limit fat, saturated fat, and cholesterol consumption was widely adopted by American female nurses during the study period. Our results show that compliance with this guidance had little if any effect in mitigating population-wide BMI increases during our study period.
自 1977 年起,美国政府开始正式发布饮食建议,其主要目标之一是减少和预防美国人口肥胖的流行。与此同时,哈佛公共卫生学院开始进行饮食摄入调查,并收集护士健康研究 I(NHSI)和 II(NHSII)中女性护士的体重指数(BMI)(kg/m)数据。
我们旨在评估美国政府限制总脂肪、饱和脂肪和胆固醇摄入的营养指导是否与肥胖的流行有意义相关。
我们分析了 1980 年至 2011 年的营养调查数据,将样本分为“遵守者”和“不遵守者”,前者遵守总脂肪、饱和脂肪和胆固醇摄入的指导,后者则不遵守。然后,我们比较了整个调查人群和年龄匹配样本中遵守者和不遵守者在整个时期的 BMI 平均值、中位数和分布。最后,我们绘制了 NHS 的原始数据,以检查受访者的能量脂肪比例摄入和同期 BMI。
遵守者和不遵守者的平均 BMI 和中位数 BMI 在整个样本期间均有所增加,BMI 分布总体上向肥胖和严重肥胖转移,并且与 1980 年 NHSI 和 1990 年 NHSII 的基线相比,年龄匹配的子样本也是如此。遵守者的平均 BMI 增加略低于不遵守者,但 BMI>30 的人群的患病率增长速度相对较高。我们还发现能量脂肪比例摄入与同期 BMI 之间没有线性关系。
在研究期间,美国政府限制脂肪、饱和脂肪和胆固醇摄入的指导被美国女性护士广泛采用。我们的结果表明,在我们的研究期间,遵守这一指导对减轻人口 BMI 增长几乎没有影响。