Department of Population Health, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Department of Population Health, Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom.
Adv Nutr. 2024 Jun;15(6):100237. doi: 10.1016/j.advnut.2024.100237. Epub 2024 May 4.
Addressing malnutrition for all requires understanding inequalities in nutrition outcomes and how they intersect. Intersectionality is increasingly used as a theoretical tool for understanding how social characteristics intersect to shape inequalities in health outcomes. However, little is known about the extent, range, and nature of quantitative nutrition research engaging with intersectional inequalities. This systematic scoping review aimed to address this gap. Between 15 May 2021 and 15 May 2022, we searched 8 databases. Studies eligible for inclusion used any quantitative research methodology and aimed to investigate how social characteristics intersect to influence nutrition outcomes. In total, 55 studies were included, with 85% published since 2015. Studies spanned populations in 14 countries but were concentrated in the United States (n = 35) and India (n = 7), with just 1 in a low-income country (Mozambique). Race or ethnicity and gender were most commonly intersected (n = 20), and body mass index and overweight and/or obesity were the most common outcomes. No studies investigated indicators of infant and young child feeding or micronutrient status. Study designs were mostly cross-sectional (80%); no mixed-method or interventional research was identified. Regression with interaction terms was the most prevalent method (n = 26); 2 of 15 studies using nonlinear models took extra steps to assess interaction on the additive scale, as recommended for understanding intersectionality and assessing public health impacts. Nine studies investigated mechanisms that may explain why intersectional inequalities in nutrition outcomes exist, but intervention-relevant interpretations were mostly limited. We conclude that quantitative nutrition research engaging with intersectionality is gaining traction but is mostly limited to the United States and India. Future research must consider the intersectionality of a wider spectrum of public health nutrition challenges across diverse settings and use more robust and mixed-method research to identify specific interventions for addressing intersectional inequalities in nutrition outcomes. Data systems in nutrition must improve to facilitate this. This review was registered in PROSPERO as CRD42021253339.
解决所有人的营养不良问题需要了解营养结果的不平等现象以及它们是如何相互交叉的。交叉性越来越多地被用作一种理论工具,用于理解社会特征如何相互交叉,从而塑造健康结果的不平等。然而,对于涉及交叉不平等的定量营养研究的程度、范围和性质知之甚少。本系统范围审查旨在填补这一空白。在 2021 年 5 月 15 日至 2022 年 5 月 15 日之间,我们搜索了 8 个数据库。符合纳入标准的研究使用了任何定量研究方法,旨在调查社会特征如何相互交叉影响营养结果。共有 55 项研究被纳入,其中 85%的研究是在 2015 年之后发表的。这些研究涵盖了来自 14 个国家的人群,但主要集中在美国(n=35)和印度(n=7),只有 1 项研究来自低收入国家(莫桑比克)。种族或族裔和性别是最常见的交叉点(n=20),而体重指数和超重和/或肥胖是最常见的结果。没有研究调查婴儿和幼儿喂养或微量营养素状况的指标。研究设计主要是横断面研究(80%);没有发现混合方法或干预研究。带有交互项的回归是最常见的方法(n=26);在使用非线性模型的 15 项研究中,有 2 项采取了额外的步骤,根据建议,在加性尺度上评估交互作用,以了解交叉性并评估公共卫生影响。有 9 项研究调查了可能解释营养结果存在交叉不平等现象的机制,但干预相关的解释大多有限。我们得出结论,涉及交叉性的定量营养研究正在获得关注,但主要局限于美国和印度。未来的研究必须考虑在不同环境中更广泛的公共卫生营养挑战的交叉性,并使用更强大和混合方法的研究来确定解决营养结果交叉不平等的具体干预措施。营养数据系统必须加以改进,以促进这一点。本综述在 PROSPERO 中注册为 CRD42021253339。