Changes in dietary intake during puberty and their determinants: results from the GINIplus birth cohort study

C. Harris, C. Flexeder, E. Thiering, A. Buyken, D. Berdel, S. Koletzko, C.-P. Bauer, I. Brüske, B. Koletzko, M. Standl, BMC Public Health 15 (2015) 841.

Download
No fulltext has been uploaded.
Journal Article | Published | English
Author
Harris, Carla ; Flexeder, Claudia; Thiering, Elisabeth; Buyken, AnetteLibreCat; Berdel, Dietrich; Koletzko, Sibylle; Bauer, Carl-Peter; Brüske, Irene; Koletzko, Berthold; Standl, Marie
Abstract
Background Understanding changes in dietary intake during puberty could aid the mapping of dietary interventions for primary prevention. The present study describes dietary changes from childhood to adolescence, and their associations with parental education, family income, child education, body mass index (BMI), pubertal onset and screen-time sedentary behaviour. Methods Dietary data (n = 1232) were obtained from food frequency questionnaires at the 10- and 15-year follow-ups of the GINIplus birth cohort study. Intakes of 17 food groups, macronutrients and antioxidant vitamins, were described by a) paired Wilcoxon rank sum tests, comparing average intakes at each time-point, and b) Cohen’s kappa “tracking” coefficients, measuring stability of intakes (maintenance of relative tertile positions across time). Further, associations of changes (tertile position increase or decrease vs. tracking) with parental education, family income, child education, pubertal onset, BMI, and screen-time, were assessed by logistic regression and multinomial logistic regression models stratified by baseline intake tertile. Results Both sexes increased average intakes of water and decreased starchy vegetables, margarine and dairy. Females decreased meat and retinol intakes and increased vegetables, grains, oils and tea. Males decreased fruit and carbohydrates and increased average intakes of meat, caloric drinks, water, protein, fat, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), vitamin C and alpha-tocopherol. Both sexes presented mainly “fair” tracking levels [κw = 0.21–0.40]. Females with high (vs. low) parental education were more likely to increase their nut intake [OR = 3.8; 95 % CI = (1.7;8.8)], and less likely to decrease vitamin C intakes [0.2 (0.1;0.5)], while males were less likely to increase egg consumption [0.2 (0.1;0.5)] and n3 PUFAs [0.2 (0.1;0.5)]. Females with a higher (vs. low) family income were more likely to maintain medium wholegrain intakes [0.2 (0.1;0.7) for decrease vs. tracking, and 0.1 (0.0;0.5) for increase vs. tracking], and were less likely to decrease vitamin C intakes [0.2 (0.1;0.6)]. Males with high education were less likely to increase sugar-sweetened foods [0.1 (0.1;0.4)]. Finally, BMI in females was negatively associated with decreasing protein intakes [0.7 (0.6;0.9)]. In males BMI was positively associated with increasing margarine [1.4 (1.1;1.6)] and vitamin C intakes [1.4 (1.1;1.6)], and negatively associated with increasing n3 PUFA. Conclusions Average dietary intakes changed significantly, despite fair tracking levels, suggesting the presence of trends in dietary behaviour during puberty. Family income and parental education predominantly influenced intake changes. Our results support the rationale for dietary interventions targeting children, and suggest that sex-specific subpopulations, e.g. low socio-economic status, should be considered for added impact.
Publishing Year
Journal Title
BMC Public Health
Volume
15
Page
841
LibreCat-ID

Cite this

Harris C, Flexeder C, Thiering E, et al. Changes in dietary intake during puberty and their determinants: results from the GINIplus birth cohort study. BMC Public Health. 2015;15:841.
Harris, C., Flexeder, C., Thiering, E., Buyken, A., Berdel, D., Koletzko, S., Bauer, C.-P., Brüske, I., Koletzko, B., & Standl, M. (2015). Changes in dietary intake during puberty and their determinants: results from the GINIplus birth cohort study. BMC Public Health, 15, 841.
@article{Harris_Flexeder_Thiering_Buyken_Berdel_Koletzko_Bauer_Brüske_Koletzko_Standl_2015, title={Changes in dietary intake during puberty and their determinants: results from the GINIplus birth cohort study}, volume={15}, journal={BMC Public Health}, author={Harris, Carla and Flexeder, Claudia and Thiering, Elisabeth and Buyken, Anette and Berdel, Dietrich and Koletzko, Sibylle and Bauer, Carl-Peter and Brüske, Irene and Koletzko, Berthold and Standl, Marie}, year={2015}, pages={841} }
Harris, Carla , Claudia Flexeder, Elisabeth Thiering, Anette Buyken, Dietrich Berdel, Sibylle Koletzko, Carl-Peter Bauer, Irene Brüske, Berthold Koletzko, and Marie Standl. “Changes in Dietary Intake during Puberty and Their Determinants: Results from the GINIplus Birth Cohort Study.” BMC Public Health 15 (2015): 841.
C. Harris et al., “Changes in dietary intake during puberty and their determinants: results from the GINIplus birth cohort study,” BMC Public Health, vol. 15, p. 841, 2015.
Harris, Carla, et al. “Changes in Dietary Intake during Puberty and Their Determinants: Results from the GINIplus Birth Cohort Study.” BMC Public Health, vol. 15, 2015, p. 841.

Export

Marked Publications

Open Data LibreCat

Search this title in

Google Scholar