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Socioeconomic disparities in obesity prevalence: Role of diet quality and diet cost.

机译:肥胖患病率的社会经济差异:饮食质量和饮食成本的作用。

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摘要

Socioeconomic disparities in obesity are well established. The burden of obesity is on the rise, and the prevalence is highest among minorities and those from lower incomes and education. The purpose of this study was to examine the role of dietary factors in explaining socioeconomic disparities in obesity. The data was collected as part of the Seattle Obesity Study, a population based study of adult residents of King County, WA. A series of analyses were conducted to address several gaps in the existing literature on this topic and to improve our understanding of the relations among socioeconomic status, dietary factors and obesity within the same population.;The first part of the analysis examines the relations among socioeconomic status (SES), diet cost and diet quality using a sample of 1,270 adults (468 men and 802 women). The second part of the analysis focuses on the role of diet cost in explaining socioeconomic disparities in diet quality. Income and education, used as indicators of SES, were obtained from a telephone survey. Diet cost estimates were obtained from the cost instrument attached to a Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ). The estimates reflect the monetary value of the diet using lowest prices at which foods were available in key supermarkets in the area. Diet quality measures were derived from the FFQ. These include intake of 16 key nutrients and two summary measures of overall diet quality---energy density and Mean Adequacy Ratio (MAR). For analyses, individual nutrient intake and diet cost were energy adjusted using the residual method and converted into quintiles. Multivariate regression analyses were conducted and covariates included age, gender, race/ethnicity, household size and total energy intake. Results showed consistent associations among SES, measures of diet quality and diet cost. First, a socioeconomic gradient in diet quality was established in the present sample such that higher income and education were associated with diets lower in energy density and higher in nutritional quality. Second, an association between SES and diet cost was established such that quintiles of energy adjusted diet cost were associated with higher proportions of those with higher income and higher education. Third, higher diet costs were in turn associated with higher diet quality. Nutrient intakes associated with better health (i.e. vitamin A, C, D, E, B12, beta-carotene, magnesium, potassium, calcium, iron, folate and dietary fiber) were associated with higher diet costs. On the other hand, dietary components associated with poor health outcomes (i.e., fats and added sugar) were associated with lower diet cost. Consistent associations were obtained with overall measures of diet quality such that diets lower in energy density and higher in nutritional quality were associated with higher diet costs. This is a first study to establish associations among SES, diet cost and multiple measures of diet quality using a population based sample of US adults from King County, WA.;Further, formal mediation analyses were conducted to examine the role of diet cost in explaining socioeconomic disparities in diet quality. Results showed that the significant effect of income on diet quality was mediated by diet cost. These associations were moderated by education level such that income-diet cost play a stronger role in determining diet quality among those with lower education as compared to those with higher education. This is the first study to establish that diet cost significantly mediates the relation between SES and diet quality.;The third part of the analysis extends these associations to the health outcome, body mass index (BMI). In addition to income and education separately, a SES index combining both income and education was created as another measure of SES. A series of analyses were conducted to test the overall hypothesis that diet quality and diet cost partly explain socioeconomic disparities in BMI. First, multivariate regression confirmed a socioeconomic gradient in BMI both among men and women such that those with higher income and/ or education had significantly lower BMI, after taking demographics and lifestyle factors into account. This is one of the few studies to examine the combined effects of both income and education on BMI. Second, the observed inverse association between SES and BMI somewhat attenuated when either of the diet quality variables were added into the model. Third, higher diet quality was in turn strongly determined by higher diet cost, after taking SES and demographics into account.;Results from the present study support the hypothesis that diet cost plays a significant role in explaining socioeconomic disparities in diet quality, which in turn somewhat explains higher BMI among them. These findings have implications for future epidemiological studies and public health policy.
机译:肥胖症的社会经济差异是公认的。肥胖的负担在增加,在少数族裔以及收入和教育程度较低的族裔中,患病率最高。这项研究的目的是检验饮食因素在解释肥胖症的社会经济差异方面的作用。数据是作为西雅图肥胖研究的一部分收集的,该研究是对华盛顿州金县成年居民进行的基于人口的研究。进行了一系列分析,以解决有关该主题的现有文献中的若干空白,并增进我们对同一人群中社会经济状况,饮食因素和肥胖之间关系的理解。;分析的第一部分考察了社会经济之间的关系。 1,270名成年人(468名男性和802名女性)的抽样调查了您的状态(SES),饮食成本和饮食质量。分析的第二部分着重于饮食成本在解释饮食质量中社会经济差异方面的作用。通过电话调查获得了用作SES指标的收入和教育程度。饮食成本估算是从“食物频率问卷”(FFQ)附带的成本工具获得的。该估算值反映了该地区主要超市中所购买食物的最低价格所得出的饮食货币价值。饮食质量指标来自FFQ。其中包括摄入16种关键营养素和两项总体饮食质量的汇总指标-能量密度和平均充足率(MAR)。为了进行分析,使用残差法对单个营养素的摄入量和饮食成本进行了能量调整,并转换为五分位数。进行了多元回归分析,并且协变量包括年龄,性别,种族/民族,家庭规模和总能量摄入。结果显示,SES,饮食质量和饮食成本之间存在一致的关联。首先,在本样本中建立了饮食质量的社会经济梯度,以使较高的收入和教育与饮食中能量密度较低和营养质量较高的饮食相关。其次,建立了SES与饮食成本之间的关联,以使经能量调整的饮食成本的五分位数与收入较高和受教育程度较高的人群的比例有关。第三,较高的饮食成本又与较高的饮食质量有关。与更好的健康状况相关的营养摄入(即维生素A,C,D,E,B12,β-胡萝卜素,镁,钾,钙,铁,叶酸和膳食纤维)与更高的饮食成本有关。另一方面,与健康状况不佳相关的饮食成分(即脂肪和添加的糖)与较低的饮食成本相关。饮食质量的整体衡量指标具有一致的关联性,因此能量密度较低和营养质量较高的饮食与较高的饮食成本有关。这是一项首次研究,使用华盛顿州金县的美国成年人群为基础的样本,建立了SES,饮食成本和饮食质量的多种测量之间的关联;此外,进行了正式的调解分析,以检验饮食成本在解释中的作用饮食质量方面的社会经济差异。结果表明,收入对饮食质量的显着影响是由饮食成本介导的。这些协会受教育程度的控制,因此与受高等教育程度较高的人相比,受教育程度较高的人的饮食收入成本在决定饮食质量方面起着更重要的作用。这是第一个确定饮食成本显着介导SES与饮食质量之间关系的研究。;分析的第三部分将这些关联扩展到健康结局,体重指数(BMI)。除了收入和教育之外,还创建了一个将收入和教育结合起来的SES指数,作为SES的另一项指标。进行了一系列分析以检验总体假设,即饮食质量和饮食成本部分解释了BMI中的社会经济差异。首先,多元回归分析证实了男性和女性的BMI均存在社会经济梯度,因此,在考虑了人口统计学和生活方式因素之后,那些收入较高和/或受过教育的人的BMI明显较低。这是检验收入和教育对BMI的综合影响的少数研究之一。其次,当将两种饮食质量变量中的任何一个添加到模型中时,观察到的SES和BMI之间的逆相关性都会减弱。第三,较高的饮食质量反过来又由较高的饮食成本决定,这是在考虑了SES和人口统计资料后得出的;本研究的结果支持以下假设:饮食成本在解释饮食质量的社会经济差异方面起着重要作用,这反过来又有些解释了其中较高的BMI。这些发现对未来的流行病学研究和公共卫生政策具有重要意义。

著录项

  • 作者

    Aggarwal, Anju.;

  • 作者单位

    The Johns Hopkins University.;

  • 授予单位 The Johns Hopkins University.;
  • 学科 Health Sciences Nutrition.;Health Sciences Public Health.;Health Sciences Epidemiology.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2011
  • 页码 219 p.
  • 总页数 219
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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