Tonkin Emma, Chatfield Mark D, Brimblecombe Julie, Kleve Sue, Chan Ellie, Deen Caroline, Brown Clare, Stubbs Emma, Booth Sue, Thompson Kani, Pauli Jenna, Leonard Dympna, Lee Amanda, Fredericks Bronwyn, Ferguson Megan
Department of Nutrition, Dietetics & Food, Monash University, Notting Hill, VIC, 3168, Australia.
School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Herston, QLD, 4006, Australia.
BMC Public Health. 2025 May 1;25(1):1604. doi: 10.1186/s12889-025-22815-z.
Maternal and early childhood nutrition is foundational in setting the course for lifetime metabolic and disease outcomes. Food security influences the achievement of optimal diets; however, little is known about how traditional food intake may influence this dynamic for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people living in remote communities. This study describes diets and food security status of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander pregnant and breastfeeding women and children 6 months to 5 years in remote communities in Australia, and explores interactions between diet quality, food security and traditional food consumption.
Baseline data from a trial testing a discount on healthy foods and drinks were used. Participants from eight communities (four each in coastal Cape York, Queensland and desert Central Australia, Northern Territory) participated in June-September 2021. A validated food frequency questionnaire was used to assess usual intake and calculate a diet quality score. A modified version of the United States Department of Agriculture 18-item Household Food Security Scale Module measured food security status. A model was fitted to explore the interactions between diet quality, food security and traditional food consumption.
Complete dietary data were available for 471 participants from 294 households. Average reported food group intakes of children were similar to recommended patterns, however except for adequate meat intakes those of women were not; mean diet quality scores were 23% higher in children than women (p < 0.001). Long-duration breastfeeding was described (36% of > 2-4 years breastfed). High rates of household food insecurity were reported (76%), although rates were lower in Cape York (p < 0.001). Reported traditional food intake was higher in Cape York than in Central Australia (p < 0.001). For diet quality, a significant three-way interaction between food security status, traditional food frequency and adult/child status was demonstrated (p = 0.005).
Remote community families carry out practices that protect and support the diet quality of children despite conditions that challenge food security and optimal diets. The role of traditional food consumption in reducing the impact of food insecurity on diet quality provides further evidence for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander food systems to be at the centre of comprehensive efforts to address food insecurity.
This work is part of a trial that has been registered with Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry: ACTRN12621000640808. Trial registration date: 28/05/2021.
孕产妇和幼儿营养是决定一生代谢和疾病结局走向的基础。粮食安全会影响到是否能实现最佳饮食;然而,对于居住在偏远社区的原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民而言,传统食物摄入量如何影响这一动态过程,我们却知之甚少。本研究描述了澳大利亚偏远社区原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民孕妇、哺乳期妇女以及6个月至5岁儿童的饮食及粮食安全状况,并探讨了饮食质量、粮食安全与传统食物消费之间的相互作用。
使用了一项针对健康食品和饮料折扣进行试验的基线数据。来自八个社区(昆士兰州约克角海岸和北领地澳大利亚中部沙漠地区各四个)的参与者于2021年6月至9月参与了研究。采用经过验证的食物频率问卷来评估通常摄入量并计算饮食质量得分。使用美国农业部18项家庭粮食安全量表模块的修改版来衡量粮食安全状况。拟合了一个模型来探讨饮食质量、粮食安全与传统食物消费之间的相互作用。
来自294户家庭的471名参与者提供了完整的饮食数据。报告的儿童各类食物平均摄入量与推荐模式相似,然而,除了肉类摄入量充足外,女性的摄入量并非如此;儿童的平均饮食质量得分比女性高23%(p<0.001)。报告了长期母乳喂养的情况(36%的儿童母乳喂养超过2至4年)。报告的家庭粮食不安全发生率较高(76%),不过约克角地区的发生率较低(p<0.001)。报告的约克角地区传统食物摄入量高于澳大利亚中部地区(p<0.001)。对于饮食质量,粮食安全状况、传统食物频率和成人/儿童状况之间存在显著的三向相互作用(p=0.005)。
尽管面临着粮食安全和最佳饮食方面的挑战,但偏远社区的家庭仍采取措施保护和支持儿童的饮食质量。传统食物消费在减轻粮食不安全对饮食质量影响方面的作用,为将原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民食物系统置于解决粮食不安全综合努力的核心提供了进一步证据。
本研究是已在澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心注册的一项试验的一部分:ACTRN12621000640808。试验注册日期:2021年5月28日。