| Literature DB >> 26564327 |
Naruna Pereira Rocha1, Luana Cupertino Milagres2, Juliana Farias de Novaes2, Sylvia do Carmo Castro Franceschini2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To address the association between food and nutrition insecurity and cardiometabolic risk factors in childhood and adolescence. DATA SOURCE: Articles were selected from the Medline, Lilacs and SciELO databases with no publication date limit, involving children and adolescents, using the descriptors: food and nutrition security, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, metabolic syndrome, stress and dyslipidemia. The terms were used in Portuguese, English and Spanish. The search was carried out systematically and independently by two reviewers. DATA SYNTHESIS: Exposure to food insecurity during childhood and adolescence ranged from 3.3% to 82% in the selected publications. Exposure to food insecurity was associated with stress, anxiety, greater chance of hospitalization, nutritional deficiencies, excess weight and inadequate diets with reduced intake of fruits and vegetables and increased consumption of refined carbohydrates and fats.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes melito; Diabetes mellitus; Estresse e dislipidemia; Food and nutrition security; Hipertensão; Hypertension; Metabolic syndrome; Segurança alimentar e nutricional; Stress and dyslipidemia; Síndrome metabólica
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26564327 PMCID: PMC4917275 DOI: 10.1016/j.rpped.2015.08.007
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Rev Paul Pediatr ISSN: 0103-0582
Figure 1Articles selected for content assessment.
Evaluation of publications on food and nutrition insecurity and cardiometabolic risk factors in childhood and adolescence.
| Author/year | Design | Sample | Age | Nutrition variables | Nutritional Status Classification | Tool to assess food and nutrition security |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weinreb et al., 2002 | Cross-sectional | 408 preschoolers, children and adolescents | 2.5-17 years | Do not assess | Do not perform | Community Childhood Hunger Identification Project and direct questions for children older than 9 years |
| Cook et al., 2004 | Cross-sectional with cohort. | 11,539 children's caregivers | Children <36 months | Weight and height | Do not report | U.S. Household Food Security Scale (U.S. HFSS) |
| Molcho et al., 2006 | Cross-sectional | 8424 schoolchildren | 10-17 years | Do not assess | Do not report | Food and nutrition insecurity defined by two structured questions |
| Martin et al., 2007 | Cross-sectional | 212 children and 200 parents or tutors | Children from 2 to 12 years | Weight and height | Curves of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | USDA Food Security Module |
| Jiménez-Cruz et al., 2007 | Cross-sectional | Group in 2001: 1200 children. Group in 2003: 1452 children | Children from 6 to 11 years | BMI and waist circumference | Curves of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | Community Childhood Hunger Identification Project, adapted for Mexican children |
| Gundersen et al., 2008 | Cross-sectional | 841 children and adolescents | 3-17 years | Weight and height, BMI, stress | Curves of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | USDA Core Food Security Module (CFSM) |
| Chen et al., 2009 | Longitudinal | 764,526 children | Children born between 1997 and 1999 | Low birth weight reported | Not reported | Food and nutrition insecurity assessed by data on low birth weight, economic status, maternal nutritional status and family income |
| Kirkpatrick et al., 2010 | Longitudinal | 5809 children and 3333 adolescents | 1st group: 10-15 years and 2nd group: 16-21 years | Do not assess | Do not perform | Food and nutrition insecurity assessed by questions asked to the most experienced person |
| Marjerrison et al., 2011 | Cross-sectional | 183 families with children and adolescents | <18 yearsMean: 11.8±3.99 years | BMI and A1c hemoglobin | Do not report | Household Food Security Survey Canadian Community Health Survey Module |
| Sharkey et al., 2012 | Cross-sectional | 50 mothers and 50 children | 6-11 years | Weight, height and BMI | Curves of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention | Tool developed by Connell et al., |
The instrument developed by Connell et al. (2004)24 has nine questions directed to the child.
Results found in articles on food and nutrition insecurity and cardiometabolic risk factors in childhood and adolescence.
| Author/year | Result association | Ethnicities | Prevalence of FNiS | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weinreb et al., 2002 | Preschoolers: food and nutrition insecurity and worse health status ( | Yes | Preschoolers: 59.2% of food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Schoolchildren: 66% | ||||
| Cook et al., 2004 | Food and nutrition insecurity and health status reported as "Fair/poor" ( | Yes | 21.4% of households with food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Molcho et al., 2006 | Food and nutrition insecurity and lower consumption of fruits ( | No | Low social classes: 15.3% | Yes |
| Middle class: 15.9% | ||||
| High social classes: 14.8% | ||||
| Martin et al., 2007 | There was no association between excess weight and food and nutrition insecurity ( | Yes | 51.4% of households in food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Jiménez-Cruz et al., 2007 | Higher food and nutrition insecurity in children of parents of Native ethnicity (68%; | Yes | 46% in 2001 group | No |
| Higher food and nutrition insecurity in children younger than 9 years (71%; | 58% in the 2003 group | |||
| Children without abdominal obesity and higher prevalence of food and nutrition insecurity (78%, | ||||
| Gundersen et al., 2008 | Stress and food and nutrition insecurity at family level ( | Yes | 44.5% of households with food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Chen et al., 2009 | Food and nutrition insecurity and diabetes mellitus ( | No | Food and nutrition insecurity value is not shown, the study associates income to food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Kirkpatrick et al., 2010 | Food and nutrition insecurity and higher chances of having worse health status ( | No | 10-15 years: 3.3% | Yes |
| Food and nutrition insecurity was not associated to diagnosed chronic health conditions ( | 16-21 years: 3.9% | |||
| Marjerrison et al., 2011 | Food and nutrition insecurity and higher rate of hospitalization ( | No | 21.9% of food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Sharkey et al., 2012 | Food and nutrition insecurity higher total consumption of energy, calcium, calories from added sugars ( | No | 82% of children with food and nutrition insecurity | Yes |
| Body mass index was not associated with food and nutrition insecurity status |
Data not shown.
Figure 2Association between food insecurity and cardiometabolic risk factors in childhood and adolescence.Adapted from Ref. [3].