| Literature DB >> 24106456 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Little is known about the effects of dietary acculturation in minority groups in the Nordic countries, including immigrants from non-Western societies.Entities:
Keywords: Ethnic groups; cardiovascular diseases; dental caries; diabetes; obesity; vitamin D deficiency
Year: 2013 PMID: 24106456 PMCID: PMC3790911 DOI: 10.3402/fnr.v57i0.21668
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Nutr Res ISSN: 1654-661X Impact factor: 3.894
Population in the Nordic countries 2010, with regard to countries of origin
| Denmark | Faroe islands | Finland (including Åland) | Iceland | Norway | Sweden | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | 5,534,738 | 48,568 | 5,379,161 | 317,630 | 4,858,199 | 9,340,682 |
| All foreign-born (% of all) | 501,511 (9.96%) | 5,912 (12.17%) | 236,766 (4.60%) | 35,121 (11.06%) | 526,799 (10.84%) | 1,337,965 (14.32%) |
| Nordic countries | 76,286 (15.21%) | 3,793 (64.16%) | 35,543 (15.01%) | 6,314 (17.98%) | 76,974 (14.61%) | 266,519 (19.92%) |
| Europe (except Nordic c.) | 180,532 (36.00%) | 492 (8.32%) | 114,852 (48.51%) | 20,361 (57.97%) | 189,672 (36.00%) | 441,954 (33.03%) |
| America | 27,909 (5.56%) | 147 (2.49%) | 9,946 (4.20%) | 2,877 (8.19%) | 41,650 (7.91%) | 92,610 (6.92%) |
| Africa | 35,377 (7.05%) | 101 (1.71%) | 20,489 (8.65%) | 780 (2.22%) | 53,579 (10.17%) | 103,077 (7.70%) |
| Western Asia | 79,587 (15.87%) | 6 (0.10%) | 15,992 (6.75%) | 193 (0.55%) | 47,273 (8.97%) | 261,954 (19.58%) |
| South Asia | 27,288 (5.44%) | 60 (1.01%) | 6,659 (2.81%) | 460 (1.31%) | 34,932 (6.63%) | 37,769 (2.82%) |
| Southeast Asia | 28,705 (5.72%) | 133 (2.25%) | 12,231 (5.17%) | 2,949 (8.40%) | 39,505 (7.50%) | 48,589 (3.63%) |
| East Asia | 12,012 (2.40%) | 18 (0.30%) | 7,701 (3.25%) | 569 (1.62%) | 10,055 (1.91%) | 24,096 (1.80%) |
| Rest of Asia | 29,609 (5.90%) | 69 (1.17%) | 7,389 (3.12%) | 454 (1.29%) | 30,751 (5.84%) | 56,395 (4.21%) |
| Oceania | 3,259 (0.70%) | 13 (0.22%) | 1,119 (0.47%) | 138 (0.39%) | 2,408 (0.46%) | 4,251 (0.32%) |
| Unknown/stateless | 947 (0.19%) | 1,080 (18.27%) | 4,845 (2.05%) | 26 (0.07%) | 0 (0.00%) | 751 (0.06%) |
Fig. 1Flowchart for study of articles regarding population groups in dietary transition.
Vitamin D deficiency among immigrant children in the Nordic countries, with strength of evidence
| Exposure/intervention | No. of participants (No. of studies) | Outcome variable (primary or secondary) | RR (95% CI) | Effect (95% CI) | No. of studies rated as A, B, or C | Strength of evidence | Comments | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D deficiency among children 0–16 years of age | 309 (immigrants 191, controls 118) | Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Vitamin D deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L): All 60% (46–74%) | 3 B | Convincing | Lack of comparative data with indigenous population, but high rate of deficiency | ||
| Vitamin D deficiency among children 0–8 years of age | 152 (immigrants 127, indigenous 25) | Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Vitamin D deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L): All 46% (20–73%) | 2 B | Convincing | Lack of comparative data with indigenous population, but high rate of deficiency | ||
| Vitamin D deficiency among children 9–16 years of age | 157 (immigrants 64, indigenous 93) | Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L): All 81% (63–100%) | 2 B | Convincing | Lack of comparative data with indigenous population, but high rate of deficiency | ||
| Nutritional rickets among children aged 0–16 years | 198 (immigrants 167, indigenous 31) (3 studies) | Incidence of nutritional rickets | All immigrants born I Denmark 0.60 (0.39–0.81) ‰ per year | 1A | Convincing | |||
| Nutritional rickets among children aged 0–4 years | 95 (immigrants 66, indigenous 29) (2 studies) | Incidence of nutritional rickets | 49 (31–77) | All immigrants born in Denmark 0.97 (0.86–1.08) ‰ per year | 1 A | Convincing |
Vitamin D deficiency among immigrant pregnant women in the Nordic countries, with strength of evidence
| Exposure/Intervention | No. of participants (No. of studies) | Outcome variable (primary or secondary) | RR (95% CI) | Effect (95% CI) | No. of studies rated as A, B orC | Strength of evidence (convincing, probable, limited-suggestive, limited-no conclusion) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D deficiency pregnant women |
| Vitamin D deficiency | Subnormal level (Calcidiol < 30 nmol/L): 2.78 (1.31–5.88) | Difference in | 4 B | Convincing |
Vitamin D deficiency among adult immigrants in the Nordic countries, with strength of evidence
| Exposure/intervention | No. of participants (No. of studies) | Outcome variable (primary or secondary) | RR (95% CI) | Effect (95% CI) | No. of studies rated as | Strength of evidence (convincing, probable, limited-suggestive, limited-no conclusion) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin D deficiency in the adult general population, women |
| Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Vitamin D deficiency (25(OH)D < 20 nmol/L), Arabs: 10.45 (4.63–23.58) | Deficiency, low level: Calcidiol (< 20 nmol/L), Pakistani: 62% (43–81%) | 1 A | Convincing | |
| Vitamin D deficiency in the adult general population, men |
| Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Secondary hyperparathyroidism (s-iPTH ≥ 8.5 pmol/L + 25(OH) D < 50 + s-Ca ≤1.35 nmol/L), Pakistani: 5.53 (2.82–10.84) | Moderate deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L), Pakistani: 51.0% (43.7–58.2%) | 1 A | Convincing | |
| Vitamin D deficiency in the adult general population, women and men |
| 25(OH)D: –49.8 (–53.4–46.2) nmol/L | 1 A | Convincing | |||
| Vitamin D deficiency in the adult general population, women, compared to country of origin |
| Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Vitamin D deficiency (25(OH)D < 20 nmol/L), Tamils in Norway vs. in Sri Lanka: 5.50 (2.67–11.33) | Deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L), Tamils in Norway vs. in Sri Lanka: 28.4% (16.4–40.4%) | 1 A | Convincing | Only one study, but of high quality with distinct results |
| Vitamin D deficiency in the adult general population, men, compared to country of origin |
| Vitamin D deficiency (primary) | Deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L), Tamils in Norway vs. in Sri Lanka: 31.9% (19.9–44.0%) | 1 A | Convincing | Only one study, but of high quality with distinct results | |
| Vitamin D deficiency in the adult general population, women and men, compared to country of origin |
| Vitamin D deficiency (25(OH)D < 20 nmol/L), Tamils in Norway vs. in Sri Lanka: 9.26 (4.91–17.44) | Deficiency (25(OH)D < 25 nmol/L), Tamils in Norway vs. in Sri Lanka: 29.5% (21.1–37.9%) | 1 A | Convincing | Only one study, but of high quality with distinct results |
Iron deficiency among immigrants in the Nordic countries
| Exposure/intervention | No. of participants (No. of studies) | Outcome variable (primary or secondary) | RR (95% CI) | Effect (95% CI) | Nuo. of studies rated as | Strength of evidence (convincing, probable, limited-suggestive, limited-no conclusion) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iron deficiency, children |
| Anemia (primary) | Anemia (Hb < 11 g/100 ml): 2.03 (0.54–7.65) | Anemia (Hb < 11 g/100 ml): 9.1% (–7.9–26.1%) | 1 B | Limited – suggestive | |
| Iron deficiency, pregnant women |
| Anemia (primary) | Anemia (Hb < 11 g/100 ml): 1.63 (0.68–3.89) | Anemia (Hb < 11 g/100 ml): 13.2% (–10.5–36.8%) | 1 B | Probable |
Caries among immigrant children in the Nordic countries
| Exposure/intervention | No. of participants (No. of studies) | Outcome variable (primary or secondary) | RR (95% CI) | Effect | No. of studies rated as | Strength of evidence (convincing, probable, limited-suggestive, limited-no conclusion) | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preschool children (< 7 years of age) |
| Manifest caries (primary) | 2.5 years: | 2.5 years: 5.1% (1.7–8.6%) | 1 A | Convincing | |
| Early school age (7 years of age) |
| Manifest caries | dmfs + DMFS (mean caries experience with significance level according to Student's | PP (prevalence proportion rate): | 1 B | Probable | |
| Teenagers (15 years of age) |
| Manifest caries | DMFS (mean caries experience): | PP (prevalence proportion rate): | 2 B | Limited – no conclusion |
denotes p<0.05
p<0.01 and
p<0.001.