| Literature DB >> 32166024 |
Mai Matsumoto1, Yoichi Hatamoto2, Azusa Sakamoto3, Ayumi Masumoto4, Shinji Ikemoto5.
Abstract
Breakfast skipping is a public health issue which affects nutrient intake among adolescents worldwide. However, there have been few reports comparing intake and reference values to assess the deficiency of nutrient intake between breakfast consumers and skippers. Therefore, the present study aimed to examine the relationship between breakfast skipping and adequacy of total habitual nutrient intake among junior high school female students. The participants were 516 Japanese female junior high school students. Dietary habits during the preceding month were assessed using a brief self-administered diet history questionnaire. Inadequacy of each nutrient intake was assessed by the cut-point method, based on the estimated average requirement for fourteen nutrients and on dietary goal values for five nutrients. The overall nutritional inadequacy in participants was assessed by the number of consumed nutrients which did not meet the requirements as per the dietary reference intakes for Japanese, 2015 version. The participants were classified into two groups according to the frequency of breakfast eating: breakfast consumers (seven times/week) and breakfast skippers (0-6 times/week). Adequacy of vitamin A, vitamin B1, vitamin B2, vitamin C, Ca, Fe, Zn and K was higher among breakfast consumers than among skippers. Breakfast consumers had more intakes of fruits, vegetables and dairy products. Our findings suggest that breakfast skipping was related to deficiencies in vitamin and mineral intakes, and to an unfavourable dietary pattern, among Japanese female junior high school students.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; BDHQ15y, brief self-administered diet history questionnaire for Japanese children and adolescents; Breakfast skipping; DG, dietary goal to prevent lifestyle-related diseases; DRI, dietary reference intake; EAR, estimated average requirement; Habitual nutrient intakes; Nutritional adequacy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32166024 PMCID: PMC7054306 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2019.44
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Characteristics of study participants categorised into breakfast consumers and skippers (n 516)
(Numbers and percentages; mean values and standard deviations)
| Breakfast consumers ( | Breakfast skippers ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % | % | ||||
| Grade | 0·688 | ||||
| 1 | 149 | 34·9 | 27 | 30·3 | |
| 2 | 152 | 35·6 | 36 | 40·4 | |
| 3 | 126 | 29·5 | 27 | 30·3 | |
| School type | 0·002 | ||||
| Public | 266 | 62·3 | 40 | 44·9 | |
| Private | 161 | 37·7 | 49 | 55·1 | |
| Body height (cm) | 0·389 | ||||
| Mean | 154·4 | 154·6 | |||
| 8·1 | 6·3 | ||||
| Body weight (kg) | 0·637 | ||||
| Mean | 45·5 | 46·5 | |||
| 7·6 | 7·3 | ||||
| BMI (kg/m2) | 0·909 | ||||
| Mean | 19·3 | 19·4 | |||
| 6·5 | 2·6 | ||||
| Energy intake (kJ/d) | 0·176 | ||||
| Mean | 8883 | 8410 | |||
| 2213 | 2598 | ||||
| Number of days exercising | 0·158 | ||||
| Every day | 202 | 47·3 | 29 | 32·6 | |
| 4–6 d/week | 61 | 14·3 | 17 | 19·1 | |
| 2–3 d/week | 49 | 11·5 | 12 | 13·5 | |
| 1 d/week | 39 | 9·1 | 10 | 11·2 | |
| Never | 76 | 17·8 | 21 | 23·6 | |
| Work status of father | 0·205 | ||||
| Full-time | 372 | 87·1 | 73 | 82·0 | |
| Others | 55 | 12·9 | 16 | 18·0 | |
| Work status of mother | 0·821 | ||||
| Full-time | 88 | 20·6 | 21 | 23·6 | |
| Part-time | 170 | 39·8 | 34 | 38·2 | |
| Others | 169 | 39·6 | 34 | 38·2 | |
| Eating lunch every day | <0·001 | ||||
| Yes | 417 | 97·7 | 69 | 77·5 | |
| No | 10 | 2·3 | 20 | 22·5 | |
| Eating dinner every day | <0·001 | ||||
| Yes | 414 | 97·0 | 71 | 79·8 | |
| No | 13 | 3·0 | 18 | 20·2 | |
| Eating snacks before dinner every day | 0·003 | ||||
| Yes | 110 | 25·8 | 10 | 11·2 | |
| No | 317 | 74·2 | 79 | 88·8 | |
| Eating snacks after dinner every day | 0·278 | ||||
| Yes | 29 | 6·8 | 9 | 10·1 | |
| No | 398 | 93·2 | 80 | 89·9 | |
| Number of days skipping breakfast | – | ||||
| 1–2 d/week | – | – | 53 | 59·6 | |
| 3–4 d/week | – | – | 12 | 13·5 | |
| 5–6 d/week | – | – | 11 | 12·4 | |
| 7 d/week | – | – | 13 | 14·6 | |
* The P values are shown for the χ2 test for categorical variables and for the independent t test for continuous variables and pertain to comparisons between breakfast consumers and skippers.
Daily nutrient intakes and prevalence of not meeting estimated average requirement (EAR) and tentative dietary goal to prevent lifestyle-related disease (DG) among 516 female junior high school students categorised into breakfast consumers and skippers*
(Mean values and standard deviations)
| Reference value | Breakfast consumers ( | Inadequacy | Breakfast skippers ( | Inadequacy | Crude model | Adjusted model | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | OR | 95 % CI | |||||||||
| Nutrients with EAR | ||||||||||||
| Protein (g) | ≥45 | 81 | 14 | 0 | 77 | 13 | 0 | 0·004 | – | <0·001 | – | – |
| Vitamin A (μg RAE) | ≥500 | 815 | 401 | 16·4 | 755 | 365 | 24·7 | 0·194 | 0·062 | 0·184 | 0·546 | 0·301, 0·989 |
| Vitamin B1 (mg) | ≥1·1 | 0·96 | 0·17 | 79·6 | 0·91 | 0·16 | 88·8 | 0·007 | 0·045 | 0·005 | 0·379 | 0·173, 0·831 |
| Vitamin B2 (mg) | ≥1·2 | 1·8 | 0·41 | 6·6 | 1·6 | 0·44 | 15·7 | 0·001 | 0·004 | < 0·001 | 0·377 | 0·179, 0·794 |
| Niacin (mg NE) | ≥12 | 17 | 4·3 | 10·8 | 16 | 3·8 | 16·9 | 0·097 | 0·106 | 0·066 | 0·508 | 0·252, 1·022 |
| Vitamin B6 (mg) | ≥1·1 | 1·4 | 0·33 | 18·7 | 1·3 | 0·26 | 27·0 | 0·005 | 0·078 | 0·002 | 0·582 | 0·326, 1·038 |
| Vitamin B12 (mg) | ≥1·9 | 8·6 | 4·0 | 0·2 | 7·9 | 3·3 | 0 | 0·135 | – | 0·066 | – | – |
| Folate (μg) | ≥190 | 404 | 139 | 2·8 | 354 | 117 | 5·6 | 0·002 | 0·117 | 0·001 | 0·522 | 0·154, 1·771 |
| Vitamin C (mg) | ≥80 | 138 | 57 | 12·2 | 117 | 47 | 23·6 | 0·001 | 0·005 | <0·001 | 0·479 | 0·256, 0·894 |
| Ca (mg) | ≥700 | 875 | 281 | 29·3 | 768 | 292 | 50·6 | 0·001 | <0·001 | <0·001 | 0·314 | 0·186, 0·530 |
| Mg (mg) | ≥240 | 290 | 58 | 19·7 | 271 | 46 | 21·3 | 0·004 | 0·719 | 0·001 | 0·777 | 0·428, 1·429 |
| Fe (mg) | ≥10·0 | 8·9 | 2·1 | 73·3 | 8·4 | 1·9 | 83·1 | 0·036 | 0·051 | 0·020 | 0·477 | 0·250, 0·912 |
| Zn (mg) | ≥7·0 | 10·0 | 1·4 | 0·9 | 9·4 | 1·4 | 4·5 | 0·001 | 0·013 | <0·001 | 0·195 | 0·040, 0·952 |
| Cu (mg) | ≥0·6 | 1·3 | 0·21 | 0 | 1·2 | 0·20 | 0 | 0·049 | – | 0·041 | – | – |
| Nutrients with DG | ||||||||||||
| Fat (% energy) | 20–30 | 30 | 5·3 | 56·9 | 29 | 5·8 | 50·6 | 0·111 | 0·273 | 0·119 | 1·402 | 0·852, 2·308 |
| Carbohydrate (% energy) | 50–65 | 53 | 6·6 | 32·3 | 55 | 6·8 | 33·7 | 0·064 | 0·799 | 0·044 | 1·131 | 0·662, 1·932 |
| Total dietary fibre (g) | ≥16 | 13 | 3·9 | 80·6 | 12 | 3·2 | 84·3 | 0·098 | 0·415 | 0·060 | 0·692 | 0·355, 1·348 |
| Na (salt-equivalent) (g) | <7·0 | 12·6 | 2·8 | 99·5 | 12·1 | 2·4 | 96·6 | 0·090 | 0·011 | 0·331 | 21·177 | 2·011, 222·995 |
| K (mg) | ≥2400 | 2851 | 707 | 29·0 | 2562 | 606 | 40·4 | <0·001 | 0·034 | <0·001 | 0·498 | 0·296, 0·839 |
RAE, retinol activity equivalents; NE, niacin equivalents; DRI, dietary reference intake.
Adjustment of reporting error was performed according to the following: nutrient intake = reported nutrient intake/reported energy intake × estimated energy requirement.
DRI for 12- to 14-year-old Japanese girls. The estimated energy requirement of physical activity level II is 10 042 kJ/d.
Percentage of participants whose nutrient intake did not meet DG or EAR of DRI. Each nutrient intake was compared with the appropriate DRI value using the cut-point method.
P values are shown for independent t test to analyse differences of nutrient intake between breakfast consumers and skippers.
P values are shown for the χ2 test to analyse differences in the prevalence of participants with inadequate nutrient intake between breakfast consumers and skippers.
P values are shown for covariate analysis to analyse difference of nutrient intake between breakfast consumers and skippers adjusted for confounding variables of school type (public or private), frequency of lunch skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), dinner skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), and snack eating before dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week).
Multivariate adjusted OR about nutrient intake inadequacy of breakfast skipper with reference to breakfast consumers were calculated by adjusting for frequency of school type (public or private), lunch skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), dinner skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), snack eating before dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week) and snack eating after dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week).
Sum of retinol, β-carotene/12, α-carotene/24, and cryptoxanthin/24.
Sum of niacin and protein/6000.
Number of nutrients not meeting tentative dietary goal (DG) and estimated average requirement (EAR) among 516 female junior high school students categorised into breakfast consumers and skippers
(Mean values and standard deviations)
| Breakfast consumers ( | Breakfast skippers ( | Crude model: | Adjusted model: | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | |||||
| Total number of nutrients not meeting EAR | 2·7 | 2·1 | 3·6 | 2·4 | 0·074 | <0·001 |
| Total number of nutrients not meeting DG | 3·0 | 1·0 | 3·1 | 1·1 | 0·260 | 0·632 |
P values are shown for the independent t test to analyse differences between breakfast consumers and skippers.
P values are shown for covariate analysis to analyse differences between breakfast consumers and skippers adjusted for confounding variables of school type (public or private), frequency of lunch skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), dinner skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), snack eating before dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week) and snack eating after dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week).
Daily food group intakes among 516 female junior high school categorised into breakfast consumers and skippers (g/4184 kJ)*
(Mean values and standard deviations)
| Breakfast consumers ( | Breakfast skippers ( | Crude model: | Adjusted model: | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | Mean | |||||
| Cereals | 206·8 | 62·6 | 218·3 | 69·9 | 0·123 | 0·071 |
| Rice | 159·2 | 67·4 | 159·5 | 71·2 | 0·973 | 0·657 |
| Bread | 21·9 | 13·4 | 18·9 | 13·0 | 0·056 | 0·101 |
| Noodles | 25·7 | 16·9 | 39·9 | 34·7 | <0·001 | <0·001 |
| Pulses | 31·0 | 19·8 | 28·3 | 17·2 | 0·224 | 0·201 |
| Potatoes | 15·2 | 10·5 | 15·3 | 10·6 | 0·945 | 0·517 |
| Sugar | 2·5 | 2·3 | 2·5 | 2·4 | 0·763 | 0·404 |
| Confectionery | 43·5 | 28·3 | 46·1 | 28·4 | 0·429 | 0·366 |
| Fat and oil | 7·8 | 3·3 | 7·8 | 2·9 | 0·874 | 0·923 |
| Fat | 0·6 | 0·9 | 0·6 | 1·1 | 0·646 | 0·465 |
| Oil | 7·1 | 3·1 | 7·3 | 2·8 | 0·753 | 0·741 |
| Fruits | 35·6 | 33·2 | 28·6 | 25·0 | 0·061 | 0·028 |
| Total vegetables | 129·5 | 76·0 | 110·2 | 58·6 | 0·025 | 0·011 |
| Green and yellow vegetables | 48·5 | 32·6 | 40·0 | 24·6 | 0·022 | 0·017 |
| Other vegetables | 65·6 | 40·8 | 54·9 | 34·3 | 0·022 | 0·007 |
| Pickled vegetables | 4·9 | 6·1 | 5·7 | 6·2 | 0·233 | 0·292 |
| Mushrooms | 4·7 | 5·0 | 4·4 | 3·8 | 0·499 | 0·329 |
| Seaweed | 5·8 | 5·5 | 5·2 | 4·9 | 0·308 | 0·129 |
| Beverages | 321·9 | 175·6 | 321·0 | 195·8 | 0·964 | 0·606 |
| Fruit and vegetable juice | 31·2 | 50·3 | 23·7 | 34·6 | 0·185 | 0·129 |
| Green tea | 205·8 | 125·9 | 168·8 | 133·1 | 0·013 | 0·017 |
| Black tea | 37·9 | 80·7 | 48·4 | 94·2 | 0·280 | 0·831 |
| Soft drinks | 47·0 | 68·9 | 80·1 | 107·3 | <0·001 | 0·001 |
| Fish and shellfish | 31·2 | 17·7 | 29·4 | 16·6 | 0·370 | 0·264 |
| Meat | 38·6 | 17·5 | 37·5 | 17·0 | 0·592 | 0·473 |
| Eggs | 18·4 | 10·3 | 17·5 | 11·3 | 0·464 | 0·454 |
| Dairy products | 131·6 | 94·8 | 104·2 | 103·7 | 0·015 | 0·004 |
Adjustment of reporting error was performed according to the following: food group intake = reported food group intake/reported energy intake × 4184 (kJ).
P values are shown for the independent t test to analyse differences between breakfast consumers and skippers.
P values are shown for covariate analysis to analyse differences between breakfast consumers and skippers adjusted for confounding variables of school type (public or private), frequency of lunch skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), dinner skipping (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week), eating a snack before dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week) and snack eating after dinner (0 d/week or 1–7 d/week).