Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Social Medicine Institute, Department of Epidemiology, - Rio de Janeiro (RJ), Brazil.
Rev Bras Epidemiol. 2024 Aug 30;27:e240043. doi: 10.1590/1980-549720240043. eCollection 2024.
This study aimed to examine whether education level and income trajectories influence vegetable consumption changes over 13 years among civil servants at different campuses of a university in the state of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Vegetable intake frequency (daily and non-daily consumption), income (per capita), and education level (maintenance of low schooling/ upward mobility/maintenance of high schooling) were assessed at baseline (1999) and in the fourth wave (2011-12) of the Pró-Saúde (Pro-Health) cohort study. A total of 2,381 participants were analyzed. The association between educational and income trajectories and variation in vegetable consumption was assessed via crude and age-adjusted generalized linear models, stratified by sex.
Men in upward educational mobility showed a 0.5% increase in vegetable consumption (p=0.01), while women in this group demonstrated a 2.5% increase (p=0.05). Adjusted models showed that women who reduced their income had a lower likelihood of consuming vegetables (odds ratio [OR] 0.93; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.89-0.97).
The findings highlight the influence of social inequalities on vegetable consumption in adults.
本研究旨在检验教育水平和收入轨迹是否会影响巴西里约热内卢州一所大学不同校区公务员 13 年来蔬菜消费的变化。
在 Pró-Saúde(Pro-Health)队列研究的基线(1999 年)和第四波(2011-12 年)中,评估了蔬菜摄入频率(每日和非每日消费)、收入(人均)和教育水平(维持低教育水平/向上流动/维持高教育水平)。共分析了 2381 名参与者。通过针对性别分层的未调整和年龄调整的广义线性模型,评估了教育和收入轨迹与蔬菜消费变化之间的关联。
处于向上教育流动的男性蔬菜消费增加了 0.5%(p=0.01),而该组中的女性则增加了 2.5%(p=0.05)。调整后的模型显示,收入减少的女性食用蔬菜的可能性较低(比值比 [OR] 0.93;95%置信区间 [CI] 0.89-0.97)。
这些发现强调了社会不平等对成年人蔬菜消费的影响。