The Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health, adopted by the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2004, is an important global public health initiative aimed at reducing the burden of non-communicable diseases1. A diet rich in fat, particularly saturated fat, plays a role in the development of a range of chronic diseases, especially cardiovascular diseases (CVD)2. CVD mortality in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania is considerably higher than in Western European countries3. In the Baltic countries rapid political and economic changes have greatly influenced the health situation. CVD mortality started to increase in 1988, peaked in 1994 and then a decreasing trend in mortality was established during 1995–1999. However, no significant changes in CVD mortality have been observed since 20003. People in low socio-economic groups were the most affected by economic instability during the transition period in the 1990s. Studies undertaken in the Baltic countries have shown higher CVD mortality and morbidity in lower socio-economic groupsReference Kalediene and Petrauskiene4–Reference Monden7. In Finland CVD mortality has decreased over recent decades, although the socio-economic differences have remainedReference Valkonen, Martikainen, Jalovaara, Koskinen, Martelin and Mäkelä8. Unfavourable dietary habits might explain some of these socio-economic disparitiesReference James, Nelson, Ralph and Leather9. People with higher socio-economic status have healthier diets than those with lower socio-economic statusReference Roos, Prättälä, Lahelma, Kleemola and Pietinen10–Reference Hulshof, Brussaard, Kruizinga, Telman and Löwik12.
Education, occupation and income are often used to characterise socio-economic groupsReference Kunst and Mackenbach13. In transition countries, income and occupation tend to change rapidly. Education has some advantages because it is easy to measure and undergoes only minor changes throughout adult life. Therefore, education is frequently selected to be the main measure of socio-economic statusReference Galobardes, Morabia and Bernstein14, Reference Turrell, Hewitt, Patterson and Oldenburg15.
Previous studies have shown that the diet of people with high education tends to be closer to national and international dietary recommendationsReference Johansson, Thelle, Solvoll, Bjorneboe and Drevon11, Reference Hulshof, Brussaard, Kruizinga, Telman and Löwik12, Reference Roos, Lahelma, Virtanen, Prättälä and Pietinen16. Several systematic reviews of European studies have analysed the differences across educational groups with respect to the consumption of food items that contain fat (butter, cheese, milk)Reference Lopez-Azpiazu, Sanchez-Villegas, Johansson, Petkeviciene, Prattala and Martinez-Gonzalez17–Reference Sanchez-Vllegas, Martinez, Prättälä, Toledo, Roos and Martinez-Gonzalez19. The data show that the highly educated have different sources of saturated fat compared with people who have a lower level of education. Systematic reviews are limited by the fact that analysed studies are heterogeneous, because they use different definitions of educational level as well as various dietary survey methods and classifications of foods.
The Finbalt Health Monitor project provides a unique opportunity to study sociodemographic variations in the consumption of foods containing fat in Finland and the Baltic countries, using data collected according to a commonly agreed protocol and a standardised questionnaire. The specific questions addressed in the present study were:
● Are there any differences in the consumption of foods containing fat related to educational level in these countries (Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania)?
● Is there variation between the countries in the consumption of foods containing fat?
● Is the association between sources of fat and education the same in all four countries?
Methods
The data utilised were collected in cross-sectional postal Finbalt Health Monitor surveys carried out in 1998, 2000 and 2002 in Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania. Nationally representative random samples were drawn from the population registers. The sampling unit was the individual in all surveys and no measures were taken to substitute non-respondents. The methodology and questionnaires have been standardisedReference Prättälä, Helasoja, McQueen and Puska20. In all of the countries, questionnaires were mailed in April–May and one or two reminders were sent. The numbers of respondents and response rates by country and study year are presented in Table 1.
* Data are presented as n (response rate, %).
In Estonia, Finland and Lithuania, education was measured as the total years of education by asking the question: ‘How many years in total have you gone to school or studied full-time in your life?’ The respondents were categorised into three groups: persons with low (0–9 years), intermediate (10–13 years) or high (>13 years) education. In Latvia, education was measured using four educational levels (primary, secondary, vocational and university). The respondents with primary education were considered to have low education, those with secondary and vocational to have intermediate education, and those with university, high education.
In all countries the degree of urbanisation was based on an administrative classification of the places of residence. The respondents were grouped as living in cities, towns or villages according to their place of residence (Table 1).
Information on the type of fat used in cooking was elicited with the following question: ‘What kind of fat do you mostly use for food preparation at home?’ This variable was dichotomised as vegetable oil users and others. In 2002, people who used liquid soft margarine were considered to be users of vegetable oil in Finland. This type of food was not commonly used earlier, and this category did not exist in the questionnaires in the earlier surveys. The respondents were also asked what kind of fat they mostly used on bread. The variable was divided into two categories: butter users and others. The group of ‘butter users’ consisted of persons using butter, lard or other fat of animal origin in the Baltic countries and those using butter or a butter–vegetable oil mixture in Finland. Milk drinkers were divided into those who drank high-fat milk (3.9% fat content and more) and others. Consumption of cheese and meat and meat products was rated according to how often the respondents had consumed these products during the last week. Possible responses were: never, 1–2 days, 3–5 days and 6–7 days per week. The respondents were categorised as daily users (6–7 per week) and others.
Data were analysed using the statistical package SPSS (version 12.0.1). Educational differences in fat-related food habits were examined by applying logistic regression analysis. All the models were applied separately for men and women in each country. The odds of having a certain fat-related food habit were calculated with adjustment for age and place of residence. The overall effect was added first, followed by education, age and finally place of residence.
Results
The use of vegetable oil for cooking was more prevalent in the Baltic countries than in Finland (Tables 2 and 3). Finns preferred to use fats other than vegetable oil in food preparation: butter or products containing mainly butter (24% of men and 22% of women), low-fat spreads or soft margarine (25% and 17%, respectively). In Lithuania 18% of men and 8% of women reported using butter or lard for cooking; corresponding figures in Latvia were 15% and 7% and in Estonia 12% and 7%, respectively.
Data are presented as % (95% confidence interval).
Data are presented as % (95% confidence interval).
The use of butter on bread was most common among Estonians. The lowest proportion of butter users was found in Finland. Finns indicated most frequently that they used low-fat spreads on bread (37% of men and 38% of women). In Finland, the proportion of persons using no fat on bread (14% in men and 19% in women) was larger than in the Baltic countries (7–12%).
A remarkable difference in the consumption of high-fat milk was found between Finland and the Baltic countries. While half of the Lithuanian respondents reported drinking high-fat milk, this was the case for only 2–6% of the Finns. However, the proportion of daily consumers of cheese was the largest in Finland (every fifth respondent), but the smallest in Lithuania (4–5% of respondents). Daily consumption of meat or meat products was especially common in Estonia and least prevalent in Finland (Tables 2 and 3).
Adjusted odds ratios (OR) for the likelihood of using foods containing fat depending on educational level are presented in Tables 4 and 5. The educational gradient in the use of foods containing fat was especially obvious among Finnish men (Table 4). Better-educated men reported using vegetable oil for cooking more often than those with low education. Using butter on bread, drinking high-fat milk and eating meat or meat products daily were more common among less-educated men. Daily consumption of cheese was more prevalent among the better-educated men in Finland.
OR – odds ratio; CI – confidence interval.
* Adjusted for age and place of residence.
OR – odds ratio; CI – confidence interval.
* Adjusted for age and place of residence.
In Estonia highly educated men were less likely to drink high-fat milk and use butter on bread than men with a low level of education. The consumption of meat and meat products was more common among men with a higher level of education.
In Latvia highly educated men reported using vegetable oil for cooking and animal fat on bread more frequently, as well as the daily consumption of cheese. Consumption of high-fat milk was less prevalent among better-educated men in Latvia.
An educational gradient was observed in Lithuanian men in the use of vegetable oil for cooking and butter on bread. The highly educated men were less likely to drink high-fat milk daily than men with low education.
Women with a higher level of education used vegetable oil for cooking more often than women with low education in all four countries (Table 5). The prevalence of high-fat milk consumption was inversely associated with education among women in Finland, Latvia and Estonia. Women with a higher level of education were less likely to spread butter on bread than women with low education in Finland and Estonia. In Latvia and Lithuania this association was the opposite. Daily consumption of meat or meat products was less common among better-educated Lithuanian women than among women with lower education.
Discussion
According to our study, there are differences in the consumption of foods containing fat between Estonia, Finland, Latvia and Lithuania. Finnish people used butter on bread, high-fat milk, meat and meat products, and vegetable oil for cooking less frequently than people in the Baltic countries. Cheese was consumed more frequently in Finland.
This study provides evidence that consumption of foods containing fat is related to educational level. A positive association was found between the level of education and use of vegetable oil for food preparation. Consumption of high-fat milk was associated with low education in all of the countries studied. Respondents with a higher level of education tended to consume cheese more often. Educational patterns in the use of butter on bread and the consumption of meat differed between the countries. Daily consumption of meat by men was associated with a low level of education in Finland and with a high level of education in Estonia.
The Finbalt Health Monitor project provides an opportunity to compare social variation in food habits in Finland and the Baltic countries. The surveys were carried out over the same period of time following a commonly agreed protocolReference Prättälä and Helasoja21. Response rates were relatively high. A standardised common questionnaire was used for data collection. In each survey the questions regarding foods containing fat were asked in the same way in every country. The country-specific categories of answers to some of the questions were adapted to suit local conditions. However, all alternatives could be classified into the common categories based on the content of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids (fat used for cooking and on bread) or on the amount of fat in the food product (milk). Information collected using the simple food-frequency questionnaire does not allow the comparison of food consumption by quantity. This method can be used to classify persons according to their food habitsReference Prättälä, Helasoja, McQueen and Puska20.
The findings of the National Findiet 2002 Study revealed that meat dishes, sausages, milk and fat spreads contributed most to dietary fat intake in the Finnish populationReference Männisto, Ovaskainen and Valsta22. Vegetable fat spread was the most important source of polyunsaturated fatty acids. Information about the main sources of fat as well as saturated and unsaturated fatty acids is limited in the Baltic countries. In our study the use of vegetable oil for cooking was lowest in Finland. However, the use of other sources of unsaturated fats (low-fat spreads and soft margarine) was common in Finland, unlike the Baltic countries. The results of the Baltic Nutrition Survey (1997) indicated frequent consumption of vegetable oil in Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania23, Reference Pomerleau, McKee, Robertson, Kadziauskiene, Abaravicius and Bartkeviciute24. Over the last decade, the great increase in the availability of vegetable oil and affordable prices have stimulated an increase in use in the Baltic countriesReference Puska, Helasoja, Prattala, Kasmel and Klumbiene25. The WHO recommendations on healthy nutrition emphasise the importance of an adequate intake of vegetable oil to promote cardiovascular health2. Our data showed that highly educated respondents used vegetable oil more frequently than the less educated in all countries. It should be noted that the same association was also found to be true in the Baltic Nutrition SurveyReference Pomerleau, McKee, Robertson, Kadziauskiene, Abaravicius and Bartkeviciute24.
Looking at the educational gradient associated with spreading butter on bread, our data indicate differences between the countries. In Estonia and Finland, the use of animal fat on bread was more common among respondents with low education, while in Latvia and Lithuania the educational gradient was the opposite. That the use of butter on bread was more common among the better educated in Latvia and Lithuania might be related to the effects of the economic transition period, when the price of butter increased and was considerably higher than that of margarine. A survey carried out in the Baltic countries showed that people with lower education tended to choose food according to price more often than more highly educated people23. The opposite educational gradient in Estonia could be explained by its closer relationship with Finland, where the consumption of butter has decreased considerably due to health promotion activitiesReference Pietinen, Vartiainen, Seppanen, Aro and Puska26, Reference Pietinen, Lahti-Koski, Vartiainen and Puska27. According to a comparison of surveys from 10 European countries, the consumption of butter is lower in the Nordic countries among those with a university education. However, evidence to suggest the opposite has been found in Great Britain, Belgium and PolandReference Prättälä, Groth, Oltesdorf, Roos, Sekula and Tuomainen18.
Dietary guidelines recommend replacing high-fat milk with low-fat or skimmed milk. In our study, the differences in consumption of high-fat milk between the Baltic countries and Finland were especially large. High-fat milk is traditionally perceived as a healthy food in the Baltic countries. Higher educational achievement was associated with lower consumption of high-fat milk in all countries. A meta-analysis of data from surveys in nine European countries did not find enough evidence to support the inverse association between educational level and intake of high-fat milkReference Sanchez-Vllegas, Martinez, Prättälä, Toledo, Roos and Martinez-Gonzalez19. However, they did find a higher level of consumption of skimmed milk among people belonging to higher occupational levels.
The consumption of cheese is perceived socially as a ‘modern’ nutritional habit. In our study, cheese was consumed more often in Finland than in the Baltic countries. The likelihood of eating cheese daily was directly associated with the level of education in Finland and Latvia. Similar trends were found in Estonia and Lithuania but they were not statistically significant and could be explained by the low prevalence of daily cheese consumption in these countries, especially in Lithuania. In many European countries, cheese is more commonly consumed by people with a high level of education than by those with a low level of educationReference Prättälä, Groth, Oltesdorf, Roos, Sekula and Tuomainen18, Reference Sanchez-Vllegas, Martinez, Prättälä, Toledo, Roos and Martinez-Gonzalez19.
Daily consumption of meat and meat products was more common in the Baltic countries than in Finland. The frequent consumption of meat in the Baltic countries could be partly explained as being a legacy from the former Soviet Union, where a high intake of protein was considered necessary for good health. Almost half of the respondents to the Baltic Nutrition Survey (1997) believed that meat was an essential component for an everyday healthy dietReference Pomerleau, McKee, Robertson, Kadziauskiene, Abaravicius and Bartkeviciute24. The relationship between daily consumption of meat and educational level was inconsistent in the countries. Highly educated Finnish men and Lithuanian women consumed meat less often than those less educated, while the educational gradient was the opposite in Estonian men.
A number of studies have demonstrated that people with low and high level of education get their dietary fat from different sourcesReference Roos, Prättälä, Lahelma, Kleemola and Pietinen10, Reference Prättälä, Groth, Oltesdorf, Roos, Sekula and Tuomainen18, Reference Sanchez-Vllegas, Martinez, Prättälä, Toledo, Roos and Martinez-Gonzalez19. These differences might have several explanations; people with a higher level of education are more concerned about their health, they have more knowledge about healthy nutrition and choose healthier foods more easily than people with a lower level of educationReference Hupkens, Knibbe and Drop28–Reference Margetts, Martinez, Saba, Holm and Kearney30. Highly educated people tend to choose modern foods, while those with a lower level of education consume more traditional foodsReference Prättälä, Berg and Puska31. They adopt new food habits faster than the less educated. Price is an important factor influencing food choice. Shortage of money, which is more common among people with a lower level of education, can restrict the consumption of healthy foodsReference Darmon, Ferguson and Briend32, Reference Darmon, Ferguson and Briend33. When buying food, people with a higher level of education choose health over food price more frequently than those with a lower level of educationReference Hupkens, Knibbe and Drop28, Reference Kearney, Kearney, Dunne and Gibney29.
In conclusion, we found that the consumption of foods containing fat was related to educational level in all four countries studied. The diet of people with a higher level of education was more in line with recommendations on the consumption of foods containing saturated and unsaturated fats than that of people with less education. The educational gradient was more consistent in Finland than in the Baltic countries. Existing educational differences in the consumption of sources of fat should be considered in the development of national CVD prevention programmes.