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Diet qualities: healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet quality in preschool children.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2016 06; 103(6):1507-13.AJ

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Diet quality indexes combine the healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet within a single construct, but few studies have evaluated their association. Emerging evidence suggests that predictors differ for the more and less healthy components of children's diets.

OBJECTIVES

Our objectives were to determine whether preschool-aged children's frequency of eating healthy foods was inversely related to their intake of unhealthy foods and to determine whether this differed by household income, maternal education, or child race-ethnicity.

DESIGN

We analyzed data from a representative sample of 8900 US children (mean age: 52.5 mo) who were born in 2001 and participated in the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort. Primary caregivers reported the frequency with which children consumed fruit, vegetables, milk, juice, sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs), fast food, sweets, and salty snacks in the past week. Response options ranged from none to ≥4 times/d. We created healthy (fruit, vegetables, milk) and unhealthy (SSBs, fast food, sweets, salty snacks) diet scores. Healthy diet behaviors were defined as ≥2 daily servings of fruit, vegetables, and milk.

RESULTS

The prevalence of consuming fruit, vegetables, and milk ≥2 times/d (i.e., having 3 healthy diet behaviors) was 18.5%, and a similar proportion (17.6%) of children had none of these healthy behaviors. Contrary to our hypotheses, children with more healthy diet behaviors did not have lower unhealthy diet scores. The intake of healthy foods was not inversely associated with unhealthy foods overall or within any subgroup. Overall, the Spearman rank correlation between healthy and unhealthy diet scores was positive (r = 0.09). From the lowest to the highest strata of household income, these correlations were 0.12, 0.14, 0.14, 0.05, and 0.00, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS

No evidence was found in US preschool-aged children of an inverse association between eating healthy and unhealthy foods. The implications of combining healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet quality within an overall index should be considered by researchers.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Divisions of Epidemiology and sanderson@cph.osu.edu.Divisions of Epidemiology and.Health Behavior and Health Promotion, The Ohio State University College of Public Health, Columbus, OH.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27099246

Citation

Anderson, Sarah E., et al. "Diet Qualities: Healthy and Unhealthy Aspects of Diet Quality in Preschool Children." The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, vol. 103, no. 6, 2016, pp. 1507-13.
Anderson SE, Ramsden M, Kaye G. Diet qualities: healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet quality in preschool children. Am J Clin Nutr. 2016;103(6):1507-13.
Anderson, S. E., Ramsden, M., & Kaye, G. (2016). Diet qualities: healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet quality in preschool children. The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 103(6), 1507-13. https://doi.org/10.3945/ajcn.115.128454
Anderson SE, Ramsden M, Kaye G. Diet Qualities: Healthy and Unhealthy Aspects of Diet Quality in Preschool Children. Am J Clin Nutr. 2016;103(6):1507-13. PubMed PMID: 27099246.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Diet qualities: healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet quality in preschool children. AU - Anderson,Sarah E, AU - Ramsden,Megan, AU - Kaye,Gail, Y1 - 2016/04/20/ PY - 2015/12/02/received PY - 2016/03/16/accepted PY - 2016/4/22/entrez PY - 2016/4/22/pubmed PY - 2017/5/27/medline KW - diet quality KW - dietary patterns KW - epidemiology KW - fruit and vegetables KW - national survey KW - preschool-aged children KW - public health KW - socioeconomic position KW - sugar-sweetened beverages SP - 1507 EP - 13 JF - The American journal of clinical nutrition JO - Am J Clin Nutr VL - 103 IS - 6 N2 - BACKGROUND: Diet quality indexes combine the healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet within a single construct, but few studies have evaluated their association. Emerging evidence suggests that predictors differ for the more and less healthy components of children's diets. OBJECTIVES: Our objectives were to determine whether preschool-aged children's frequency of eating healthy foods was inversely related to their intake of unhealthy foods and to determine whether this differed by household income, maternal education, or child race-ethnicity. DESIGN: We analyzed data from a representative sample of 8900 US children (mean age: 52.5 mo) who were born in 2001 and participated in the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort. Primary caregivers reported the frequency with which children consumed fruit, vegetables, milk, juice, sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs), fast food, sweets, and salty snacks in the past week. Response options ranged from none to ≥4 times/d. We created healthy (fruit, vegetables, milk) and unhealthy (SSBs, fast food, sweets, salty snacks) diet scores. Healthy diet behaviors were defined as ≥2 daily servings of fruit, vegetables, and milk. RESULTS: The prevalence of consuming fruit, vegetables, and milk ≥2 times/d (i.e., having 3 healthy diet behaviors) was 18.5%, and a similar proportion (17.6%) of children had none of these healthy behaviors. Contrary to our hypotheses, children with more healthy diet behaviors did not have lower unhealthy diet scores. The intake of healthy foods was not inversely associated with unhealthy foods overall or within any subgroup. Overall, the Spearman rank correlation between healthy and unhealthy diet scores was positive (r = 0.09). From the lowest to the highest strata of household income, these correlations were 0.12, 0.14, 0.14, 0.05, and 0.00, respectively. CONCLUSIONS: No evidence was found in US preschool-aged children of an inverse association between eating healthy and unhealthy foods. The implications of combining healthy and unhealthy aspects of diet quality within an overall index should be considered by researchers. SN - 1938-3207 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/27099246/Diet_qualities:_healthy_and_unhealthy_aspects_of_diet_quality_in_preschool_children_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -