| Literature DB >> 28918774 |
Kate Northstone1, Carol Joinson2, Pauline Emmett2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: There is evidence to suggest that individual components of dietary intake are associated with depressive symptoms. Studying the whole diet, through dietary patterns, has become popular as a way of overcoming intercorrelations between individual dietary components; however, there are conflicting results regarding associations between dietary patterns and depressive symptoms. We examined the associations between dietary patterns extracted using principal component analysis and depressive symptoms, taking account of potential temporal relationships.Entities:
Keywords: ALSPAC; Depression; Dietary patterns; Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; Principal components analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28918774 PMCID: PMC5848748 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980017002324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Characteristics of the whole cohort (i.e. unrestricted sample) of women and men from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children
| Women ( | Men ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| % |
| % | |
| Age (years) | ||||
| ≤29 | 4298 | 55·8 | 506 | 16·4 |
| 30–34 | 2501 | 32·5 | 1188 | 38·5 |
| 35–39 | 791 | 10·3 | 871 | 28·3 |
| ≥40 | 108 | 1·4 | 517 | 16·8 |
| Highest education | ||||
| <O level | 1714 | 22·7 | 571 | 19·0 |
| O level | 2685 | 35·6 | 647 | 21·5 |
| ≥O level | 3149 | 41·7 | 1790 | 59·5 |
| Ethnicity | ||||
| White | 7417 | 98·5 | 2989 | 98·6 |
| Non-white | 113 | 1·5 | 43 | 1·4 |
| Housing tenure | ||||
| Owner-occupied | 6335 | 82·5 | 2720 | 89·1 |
| Council/housing association | 884 | 11·5 | 172 | 5·6 |
| Private rented/other | 456 | 5·9 | 160 | 5·2 |
| Marital status | ||||
| Married | 6323 | 82·7 | 2841 | 92·6 |
| Single/widowed/divorced | 1319 | 17·3 | 228 | 7·4 |
| Subjective health status | ||||
| Fit and well | 3834 | 50·9 | 1939 | 64·4 |
| Mostly well | 3314 | 44·0 | 993 | 33·0 |
| Often unwell | 390 | 5·1 | 80 | 2·6 |
| Overcrowded accommodation | ||||
| Yes | 7014 | 93·2 | 2841 | 94·8 |
| No | 512 | 6·8 | 155 | 5·2 |
| Anxiety score (CCEI) | ||||
| Mean and | 4·62 | 3·50 | 2·93 | 2·66 |
| Median and IQR | 4 | 2–6 | 2 | 1–4 |
CCEI, Crown Crisp Experiential Index; IQR, interquartile range.
O levels were the academic examinations taken at 16 years of age in the UK school system.
More than one person per room in the household excluding kitchen and bathroom.
Fig. 1Women and men from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children included in the present study on dietary patterns and depressive symptoms (EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale)
Associations between continuous dietary pattern scores and binary EPDS scores* in the whole cohort (i.e. unrestricted sample) and the restricted sample (who were ‘disease free’ at baseline) of women from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children
| Whole cohort | Restricted sample | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Women’s dietary pattern | OR | 95 % CI |
| OR | 95 % CI |
|
| Unadjusted |
|
| ||||
| ‘Health conscious’ | 0·94 | 0·87, 1·01 | 0·082 | 0·99 | 0·90, 1·09 | 0·830 |
| ‘Processed’ | 1·12 | 1·04, 1·20 | 0·002 | 1·09 | 1·00, 1·19 | 0·064 |
| ‘Confectionery’ | 0·99 | 0·92, 1·06 | 0·754 | 1·04 | 0·95, 1·13 | 0·445 |
| ‘Vegetarian’ | 1·06 | 0·99, 1·13 | 0·120 | 1·05 | 0·96, 1·15 | 0·296 |
| Adjusted |
|
| ||||
| ‘Health conscious’ | 0·94 | 0·87, 1·03 | 0·180 | 1·01 | 0·91, 1·11 | 0·913 |
| ‘Processed’ | 1·01 | 0·92, 1·10 | 0·855 | 1·04 | 0·94, 1·16 | 0·420 |
| ‘Confectionery’ | 1·01 | 0·93, 1·10 | 0·777 | 1·05 | 0·95, 1·15 | 0·335 |
| ‘Vegetarian’ | 0·94 | 0·87, 1·02 | 0·134 | 1·01 | 0·92, 1·11 | 0·814 |
EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale.
EPDS score ≥13 compared with the reference group having EPDS score <13.
Adjusted for all variables in Table 1.
Associations between continuous dietary pattern scores and binary EPDS scores* in the whole cohort (i.e. unrestricted sample) and the restricted sample (who were ‘disease free’ at baseline) of men from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children
| Whole cohort | Restricted sample | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Men’s dietary pattern | OR | 95 % CI |
| OR | 95 % CI |
|
| Unadjusted |
|
| ||||
| ‘Healthy’ | 0·90 | 0·75, 1·07 | 0·235 | 1·01 | 0·83, 1·24 | 0·921 |
| ‘Traditional’ | 0·92 | 0·77, 1·11 | 0·903 | 0·98 | 0·80, 1·21 | 0·861 |
| ‘Processed/confectionery’ | 0·95 | 0·78, 1·15 | 0·581 | 0·85 | 0·67, 1·06 | 0·142 |
| ‘Semi-vegetarian’ | 1·20 | 1·04, 1·38 | 0·011 | 1·21 | 1·05, 1·39 | 0·008 |
| Adjusted |
|
| ||||
| ‘Healthy’ | 0·99 | 0·75, 1·29 | 0·925 | 1·08 | 0·80, 1·47 | 0·602 |
| ‘Traditional’ | 0·99 | 0·76, 1·30 | 0·951 | 1·09 | 0·81, 1·48 | 0·568 |
| ‘Processed/confectionery’ | 0·88 | 0·66, 1·17 | 0·380 | 0·80 | 0·68, 1·11 | 0·187 |
| ‘Semi-vegetarian’ | 0·86 | 0·64, 1·16 | 0·315 | 0·85 | 0·62, 1·16 | 0·303 |
EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale.
EPDS score ≥13 compared with the reference group having EPDS score <13.
Adjusted for all variables in Table 1.