The contribution of at-home and away-from-home food to dietary intake among 2-13-year-old Mexican children.
Public Health Nutr. 2017 Oct; 20(14):2559-2568.PH

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Away-from-home foods have been shown to have lower nutritional quality and larger portion sizes than many foods prepared at home. We aimed to describe energy and nutrient intakes among 2-13-year-old Mexican children by eating location (at home and away from home), overall, by socio-economic status (SES) and by urbanicity.

DESIGN

Dietary intake was collected via one 24 h recall in the 2012 Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey (ENSANUT). Location was reported for each food consumed. Results were adjusted for sex, day of recall, region, weight status, SES and urbanicity.

SETTING

Mexico (nationally representative).

SUBJECTS

Children aged 2-5 years (n 1905) and 6-13 years (n 2868).

RESULTS

Children consumed the majority of daily energy at home (89% of 2-5-year-olds; 82 % of 6-13-year-olds). The most common away-from-home eating location was school (22 % of 2-5-year-olds; 43 % of 6-13-year-olds), followed by the street (14 % of 2-5-year-olds; 13 % of 6-13-year-olds). The most common foods consumed away from home were wheat/rice and corn mixed dishes, sugar-sweetened beverages, pastries/candy/desserts, milk (2-5-year-olds only) and salty snacks (6-13-year-olds). Multivariate models showed that high-SES 2-5-year-olds consumed 14 % of daily energy away from home v. 8 % among low-SES 2-5-year-olds, and high-SES 6-13-year-olds consumed 21 % of daily energy away from home v. 14 % among low-SES 6-13 year-olds. There were no differences by urban residence.

CONCLUSIONS

Among Mexican children, most foods and beverages were consumed at home. However, the percentage of foods consumed or purchased away from home increased with age and with SES.

Links

Publisher Full Text
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
cambridge.org
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Authors+Show Affiliations

Taillie LS
1Department of Nutrition,Gillings School of Global Public Health and School of Medicine,University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill,CB # 8120 University Square,Chapel Hill,NC 27516-3997,USA.
Afeiche MC
2Nestlé Research Center,Lausanne,Switzerland.
Eldridge AL
2Nestlé Research Center,Lausanne,Switzerland.
Popkin BM
1Department of Nutrition,Gillings School of Global Public Health and School of Medicine,University of North Carolina,Chapel Hill,CB # 8120 University Square,Chapel Hill,NC 27516-3997,USA.

MeSH

AdolescentBeveragesChildChild Nutritional Physiological PhenomenaChild, PreschoolCluster AnalysisCross-Sectional StudiesDietDietary CarbohydratesDietary FatsDietary ProteinsEatingFatty AcidsFeeding BehaviorHumansInfantMental RecallMexicoMicronutrientsNutrition AssessmentNutrition SurveysNutritive SweetenersSnacksSocioeconomic FactorsUrban Population

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

27608532