| Literature DB >> 30922320 |
Joreintje D Mackenbach1, S Coosje Dijkstra2, Joline W J Beulens3,4, Jacob C Seidell2, Marieke B Snijder5, Karien Stronks5, Pablo Monsivais6, Mary Nicolaou5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthier dietary patterns are generally more costly than less healthy patterns, but dietary costs may be more important for dietary quality in lower educated and ethnic minority groups. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between dietary costs and dietary quality and interactions with ethnicity and socioeconomic position (SEP).Entities:
Keywords: DASH; Diet; Dietary costs; Dutch healthy eating index; Ethnicity; Food cost; HELIUS study; Mediterranean diet; Socioeconomic position
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30922320 PMCID: PMC6440156 DOI: 10.1186/s12937-019-0445-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Characteristics of the study participants, by ethnic origin (n = 4717)
| Ethnic origin | All ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dutch ( | South-Asian Surinamese ( | African Surinamese ( | Moroccan ( | Turkish ( | ||
| Age (years) | 48.2 (13.5) | 47.6 (12.2) | 49.7 (11.2) | 41.1 (12.0) | 41.7 (11.0) | 46.5 (12.6) |
| Men (n (%) of participants) | 635 (44.2%) | 408 (40.7%) | 314 (32.0%) | 270 (37.7%) | 277 (47.1%) | 1904 (40.4%) |
| N (%) of participants with lowest educational level | 238 (16.7%) | 463 (46.2%) | 362 (36.9%) | 333 (46.4%) | 286 (48.6%) | 1682 (35.7%) |
| N (%) of participants with medium education level | 306 (21.4%) | 281 (28.0%) | 337 (34.4%) | 244 (34.0%) | 175 (29.8%) | 1343 (28.5%) |
| N (%) of participants with highest education level | 885 (61.9%) | 259 (25.8%) | 281 (28.7%) | 140 (19.5%) | 127 (21.6%) | 1692 (35.9%) |
| Physical activity (total MET-minutes/week, median (IQR)) | 7512 (5510; 9818) | 6372 (4124; 9375) | 6960 (4440; 10,883) | 5550 (3210; 8415) | 5430 (2527; 8666) | 6654 (4230–9502) |
| Current smoker (n (%) of participants) | 325 (22.7%) | 235 (23.4%) | 224 (22.9%) | 76 (10.6%) | 167 (28.4%) | 1027 (21.8%) |
| Daily dietary costs (€/day) | 5.64 (1.48) | 5.00 (1.78) | 5.16 (1.88) | 4.78 (1.73) | 5.91 (2.05) | 5.31 (1.79) |
| Energy adjusted dietary costs (€/2000 kcal) | 5.31 (1.15) | 5.19 (1.25) | 5.24 (1.57) | 4.79 (1.34) | 5.64 (1.53) | 5.23 (1.37) |
| DHD15-index, crude mean | 78.2 (16.4) | 83.4 (16.9) | 79.3 (16.1) | 86.5 (16.1) | 84.4 (15.7) | 81.5 (16.6) |
| High diet quality (% top quintile) | 12.9% | 24.7% | 16.1% | 31.7% | 22.1% | 20.1% |
| DHD15-index, adjusted mean (95% CI)a | 76.8 (75.9; 77.6) | 83.8 (82.8; 84.7) | 77.8 (76.9; 78.8) | 88.1 (86.9; 89.2) | 87.5 (86.3; 88.8) | – |
Data are mean (standard deviation) unless otherwise stated
IQR Inter quartile range, DHD Dutch Healthy Diet, CI Confidence Interval, MET metabolic equivalent of task
aMeans and 95% CIs were derived from a General Linear Model Univariate procedure with estimated marginal means and are adjusted for age, sex, education, energy intake, smoking, physical activity
Association between daily dietary costs in tertiles and (high) dietary quality (n = 4717)
| Dietary quality (DHD15-index – continuous score) | Model 1 a | Model 2 b | |||
| β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | ||
| Dietary costs | T1 (1,14-4,56€) | ref | ref | ||
| T2 (4,57-5,58€) | 6.54** | 5.29; 7.80 | 6.69** | 5.52; 7.86 | |
| T3 (5,59-17,15€) | 7.13** | 5.59; 8.67 | 6.70** | 5.25; 8.15 | |
| High dietary quality (DHD15-index – dichotomous) | Model 1 a | Model 2 b | |||
| OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | ||
| Dietary costs | T1 (1,14-4,56€) | ref | ref | ||
| T2 (4,57-5,58€) | 2.16** | 1.77; 2.63 | 2.60** | 2.10; 3.22 | |
| T3 (5,59-17,15€) | 2.24** | 1.76; 2.86 | 2.64** | 2.02; 3.44 | |
High dietary quality was defined as the top quintile
DHD15-index Dutch Healthy Diet index 2015, T Tertile, Ref reference group, CI Confidence Interval, OR Odds ratio
*P < 0.05; **P < 0.001
a Model 1 is only adjusted for dietary energy | b Model 2 additionally adjusts for age, sex, education, ethnicity, smoking and physical activity
Association between daily dietary costs in tertiles and (high) dietary quality, by level of education (n = 4717)
| Dietary quality (DHD15-index – continuous score) | Lowest educated ( | Medium educated ( | Highest educated ( | ||||
| β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | ||
| Dietary costs | T1 (1,14-4,56€) | ref | ref | ref | |||
| T2 (4,57-5,58€) | 6.55** | 4.63; 8.47 | 6.91** | 1.35; 5.26 | 6.59** | 4.63; 8.56 | |
| T3 (5,59-17,15€) | 5.09** | 2.74; 7.44 | 6.96** | 3.49; 8.06 | 8.06** | 5.63; 10.48 | |
| High dietary quality (DHD15-index – dichotomous) | OR | 95%CI | OR | 95%CI | OR | 95%CI | |
| Dietary costs | T1 (1,14-4,56€) | ref | ref | ref | |||
| T2 (4,57-5,58€) | 2.79** | 2.00; 3.94 | 2.30** | 1.54; 3.43 | 2.88** | 1.96; 4.25 | |
| T3 (5,59-17,15€) | 2.37** | 1.54; 3.65 | 2.10* | 1.27; 3.48 | 3.72** | 2.35; 5.90 | |
High dietary quality was defined as the top quintile
All models adjust for age, sex, ethnicity, smoking, energy intake and physical activity
DHD15-index Dutch Healthy Diet index 2015, T Tertile, Ref reference group, CI Confidence Interval
*P < 0.05; **P < 0.001
Association between daily dietary costs in tertiles and dietary quality, by ethnicity (n = 4717)
| Dietary quality (DHD15-index – continuous score) | Dutch ( | South-Asian Surinamese ( | African Surinamese ( | Moroccan ( | Turkish ( | ||||||
| β | 95% CI | Β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | β | 95% CI | ||
| Dietary costs | T1 (1,14-4,56€) | ref | ref | ref | ref | ref | |||||
| T2 (4,57-5,58€) | 4.63** | 2.39; 6.88 | 6.29** | 3.80; 8.79 | 7.67** | 5.20; 10.15 | 5.87** | 2.96; 8.78 | 9.31** | 5.96; 12.65 | |
| T3 (5,59-17,15€) | 6.00** | 3.22; 8,78 | 6.89** | 3.62; 10.16 | 7.84** | 4.81; 10.87 | 4.29* | 0.58; 8.01 | 7.50** | 3.73; 11.26 | |
| High dietary quality (DHD15-index – dichotomous) | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | OR | 95% CI | |
| Dietary costs | T1 (1,14-4,56€) | ref | ref | ref | ref | ref | |||||
| T2 (4,57-5,58€) | 1.86* | 1.11; 3.11 | 2.42** | 1.59; 3.69 | 4.07** | 2.45; 6.73 | 2.13* | 1.38; 3.31 | 4.84** | 2.35; 9.99 | |
| T3 (5,59-17,15€) | 2.77* | 1.51; 5.06 | 2.79** | 1.61; 4.83 | 3.28** | 1.78; 6.03 | 1.11 | 0.62; 1.99 | 5.67** | 2.56; 12.56 | |
High dietary quality was defined as the top quintile
All models adjust for age, sex, education, smoking, energy intake and physical activity
DHD15-index Dutch Healthy Diet index 2015, T Tertile, Ref reference group, CI Confidence Interval
*P < 0.05; **P < 0.001
Fig. 1Dietary quality (DHD15-index) according to ethnicity, level of education, and dietary costs