首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>Preventive Medicine Reports >Fast food consumption is associated with higher education in women but not men among older adults in urban safety-net clinics: A cross-sectional survey
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Fast food consumption is associated with higher education in women but not men among older adults in urban safety-net clinics: A cross-sectional survey

机译:在城市安全网诊所中快餐消费与老年人的女性受教育程度有关而与男性的受教育程度无关:一项横断面调查

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摘要

Fast food consumption is linked to poor health, yet many older adults regularly consume fast food. Understanding factors contributing to fast food consumption is useful in the development of targeted interventions. The aim of this study was to characterize how fast food consumption relates to socio-demographic characteristics in a low-income sample of older adults.This study used cross-sectional survey data of 50 to79-year-olds (N-236) in urban safety-net clinics in 2010 in Kansas City, KS. Self-reported frequency of fast food consumption was modeled using ordinal logistic regression with socio-demographics as predictor variables. Participants were 56.8 ± 6.0 (mean ± SD) years old, 64% female, 45% non-Hispanic African American, and 26% Hispanic. Thirty-nine percent denied eating fast food in the past week, 36% ate once, and 25% ate fast food at least twice. Age was negatively correlated with fast food intake (r = −0.20, P = 0.003). After adjusting for age, race-ethnicity, employment, and marital status, the association between education and fast food consumption differed by sex (Pinteraction = 0.017). Among women, higher education was associated with greater fast food intake (Spearman's correlation; r = 0.28, P = 0.0005); the association was not significant in men (r = −0.14, P = 0.21). In this diverse, low-income population, high educational attainment (college graduate or higher) related to greater fast food intake among women but not men. Exploration of the factors contributing to this difference could inform interventions to curb fast food consumption or encourage healthy fast food choices among low-income, older adults.
机译:快餐消费与健康状况差有关,但是许多老年人经常食用快餐。了解导致快餐消费的因素有助于制定有针对性的干预措施。这项研究的目的是描述低收入老年人样本中快餐消费与社会人口统计学特征之间的关系。该研究使用了城市中50至79岁(N-236)的横断面调查数据2010年在堪萨斯州堪萨斯城开设安全网诊所。使用社会人口统计学作为预测变量的有序逻辑回归对自我报告的快餐消费频率进行建模。参与者为56.8±6.0岁(平均±SD),女性为64%,非西班牙裔非裔美国人为45%,西班牙裔为26%。在过去一周中,有39%的人拒绝吃快餐,有36%的人吃了一次,有25%的人至少吃了两次。年龄与快餐摄入量呈负相关(r = -0.20,P = 0.003)。在调整了年龄,种族,就业和婚姻状况之后,教育和快餐消费之间的关联因性别而异(互动= 0.017)。在女性中,高等教育与更多的快餐摄入相关(斯皮尔曼相关性; r = 0.28,P = 0.0005);该关联在男性中不显着(r = −0.14,P = 0.21)。在这一多样化的低收入人口中,受过高等教育的人(大专或以上学历)与女性而非男性中较高的快餐摄入量有关。探索造成这种差异的因素可以为减少快餐消费或鼓励低收入老年人选择健康的快餐提供干预措施。

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