Research Article
Nutritional status of 11–12-year-old Jamaican children: coexistence of under- and overnutrition in early adolescence
- Maria Jackson, Maureen Samms-Vaughan, Deanna Ashley
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 281-288
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Objective:
To determine the nutritional status of a cohort of 11–12 year olds and ascertain social and demographic factors associated with under- and overweight in early adolescence.
Design:Cross-sectional.
Subjects:Subgroup (n=1698) of the birth cohort (September–October 1986) of the Jamaican Perinatal Survey enrolled in schools in the Kingston Metropolitan area. One thousand and sixty-three parents or caregivers provided social and demographic information.
Results:Undernutrition and overnutrition are of public health significance among adolescent Jamaican children. Ten per cent of 11–12 year olds had body mass index (BMI) values below the 5th percentile (boys, 10.6%; girls, 7.1%) but this prevalence is relatively low compared with other developing countries. The prevalence of stunting was low (3%). The prevalence of overweight (BMI≥85th percentile) (19.3%) was approaching prevalence rates found in the USA. Similar social and demographic variables were associated with thinness and fatness in males. Birth weight predicted overweight in girls.
Conclusions:Under- and overnutrition in early adolescence are important problems in Jamaica. There is a need to address both under- and overnutrition in adolescence in preventive and rehabilitative intervention programmes.
Disadvantaged black and coloured infants in two urban communities in the Western Cape, South Africa differ in micronutrient status
- A Oelofse, JMA Van Raaij, AJS Benadé, MA Dhansay, JJM Tolboom, JGAJ Hautvast
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 289-294
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Objectives:
To determine the nutritional and health status of urban infants in two disadvantaged communities in the Western Cape, South Africa with special reference to micronutrient status. The results of this study will serve to plan an intervention study in these communities in the same age group.
Design:Cross-sectional study.
Setting:Two disadvantaged urban black and ‘coloured’ communities in the Western Cape, South Africa.
Subjects:Sixty infants aged 6–12 months from each community.
Outcome measures:Dietary intake, anthropometric measurements, micronutrient status and psychomotor development.
Results:Stunting and underweight were more prevalent in coloured infants (18% and 7%, respectively) than in black infants (8% and 2%, respectively). Anaemia (haemoglobin (Hb)<11 g dl−1 ) was prevalent in 64% of coloured and 83% of black infants. Iron-deficiency anaemia ( Hb<11 g dl−1 and ferritin < 10 ng ml−1) was found in 32% of coloured infants and in 46% of black infants. Zinc deficiency was prevalent in 35% and 33% of the coloured and black infants, respectively. Marginal vitamin A deficiency (serum retinol < 20 μg dl−1) was observed in 23% of black infants compared with 2% of coloured infants. Of black infants, 43% and of coloured infants 6% were deficient in two or more micronutrients. Six per cent of coloured infants had C-reactive protein concentrations above 5 mg l−1 compared with 38% of the black infants. The dietary intake of micronutrients was in general lower in black infants than in coloured infants. The overall psychomotor development, assessed by the Denver Developmental Screening Test, was different between the two groups. The coloured infants scored higher in three out of the four categories as well as in their overall score.
Conclusions:This study shows that information on stunting and wasting only in urban disadvantaged infants is not sufficient to make recommendations about specific community intervention programmes. Information on the micronutrient status, independent of wasting and stunting, is necessary to design nutrition programmes for different communities. The study also showed a substantially higher prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies among black infants.
Complementary foods in Jamaica: viscosity, energy density and feeding practices
- Julie Meeks Gardner, Susan P Walker, Karlene A Gavin, Ann Ashworth
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 295-302
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Objectives:
To develop and validate a field method for measuring the viscosity of small quantities of weaning porridges, to measure the viscosity and energy density of porridges fed in urban and rural environments, and to relate the findings to ingredients used and feeding practices.
Design:A new method for determining the viscosity of homogeneous, semi-solid weaning foods was developed. The viscosity and energy density of porridges fed to young children were measured, ingredients obtained by recall, and caregiver feeding behaviours observed.
Setting:One urban and one rural community in Jamaica.
Subjects:A purposive random sample of 70 children aged 3 to 14 months.
Results:Most children (80%) were fed porridges with medium viscosity (1700–2900 mPa s) or thicker. The mean energy density was 3.18±0.92 kJ g−1. Energy density was only moderately related to viscosity, being higher only in porridges >4000 mPa s (analysis of variance (ANOVA), P<0.05). Energy density was correlated (P<0.05) with the amounts of sugar (r=0.28) and milk powder (r=0.24) used. Viscosity and energy density were lower in porridges fed by bottle than in those fed by spoon. Anthropometric status (weight-for-length and weight-for-age) was positively correlated with energy density of the porridge but not to the encouragement or persistence of the caregiver.
Conclusions:Porridges of adequate energy density were prepared by caregivers in Jamaica without raising viscosity to levels that might constrain intakes. Improvements in porridge preparation and more varied weaning diets may have contributed to the decline in undernutrition in Jamaica.
Dietary exposures and oral precancerous lesions in Srikakulam District, Andhra Pradesh, India
- James R Hebert, Prakash C Gupta, Ramesh B Bhonsle, Hemali Mehta, Wei Zheng, Maureen Sanderson, Jane Teas
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 303-312
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Objective:
To test the effect of dietary nutrients on oral precancerous lesions in a reverse-smoking (i.e. smoking with the glowing end inside the mouth) population in South India.
Design:Case–control. Cases with precancerous lesions were matched to an equal number of lesion-free controls matched on age (±5 years), sex and village. All subjects used tobacco in some form. Dietary data were obtained using an interviewer-administered food-frequency questionnaire, designed for use in this population. All interviews were conducted blinded to the disease status of the subject. Data were analysed using logistic regression.
Setting:Nineteen rural villages in Srikakulam District, Andhra Pradesh.
Subjects:From a survey of 6007 tobacco users, 485 (79% women) were found to have precancerous, mostly palatal, lesions (cases), and 487 lesion-free subjects were selected as controls.
Results:All eligible subjects consented to participate and nearly all (>99%) had complete data for analyses. Reverse smoking was the most common form of tobacco use among cases (81.9%) and controls (73.5%), and reverse smokers were 5.19 times more likely than chewers to have these lesions (95% confidence interval = 1.35, 19.9). After controlling for relevant covariates, including the type of tobacco use, protective linear effects were observed for zinc (70% reduction across the interquartile range, P<<0.002 ), calcium (34% reduction, P<0.002 ), fibre (30% reduction, P<0.009 ), riboflavin (22% reduction, P<0.03 ) and iron (17% reduction, P<0.05 ).
Conclusions:Several dietary nutrients appear to protect against oral precancerous lesions that are strongly associated with reverse smoking. The results of this study indicate scope for targeting dietary factors in preventing oral cancer, which should be coupled with aggressive anti-tobacco use efforts.
Disparities in economic development in Eastern China: impact on nutritional status of adolescents
- Therese Hesketh, Qu Jian Ding, Andrew M Tomkins
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 313-318
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Objective:
To compare the effects of disparities in economic development in urban and rural Eastern China on the nutritional status of adolescents.
Design:A cross-sectional survey consisting of self-completion questionnaires, anthropometry and haemoglobin measurement.
Setting:Twelve middle schools in an urban and a rural area of Zhejiang Province: Hangzhou, the capital, and Chunan, a poor mountainous area.
Subjects:Some 4835 young adolescents (predominant age range 13–16 years).
Results:The mean body mass index (BMI) was significantly higher in urban Hangzhou (P=0.01) Overweight affected 3.6% overall; adjusted odds ratios (ORs) showed male sex (OR 2.1, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1–3.4) and urban residence (OR 9.1, 95% CI 3.7–22) to be the most important risk factors. The prevalence of underweight was 18%, with no significant urban–rural difference. Predictors of underweight were male sex (OR 1.5, 95% CI 1.1–2.0) and low household income (OR, 1.3, 95% CI 1.1–1.5). Mean haemoglobin was significantly lower in the rural area. Anaemia was more common in girls, 51% compared with 21% of the boys, but rural residence was not an independent risk factor. Rural students exercised more and had a less varied diet than their urban counterparts. Around one-third of the respondents consumed dietary supplements on a regular basis.
Conclusions:These results suggest that in urban areas of Eastern China a dual picture is emerging with the problems of excess (overweight and obesity) coexisting with underweight and anaemia. In rural areas the problems of relative nutritional deprivation predominate, but the long-term consequences of such marginal underweight and anaemia are not clear.
Nutrient intake over time in a multi-ethnic sample of youth
- Leslie A Lytle, John H Himes, Henry Feldman, Michelle Zive, Johanna Dwyer, Deanna Hoelscher, Larry Webber, Minhua Yang
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 319-328
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Objectives:
The purpose of this paper is to present longitudinal data on nutrient intakes of youth with emphases on differences by sex and race/ethnicity. Nutrients selected for examination are those implicated in chronic disease.
Design:24-hour dietary recalls were collected from a cohort of third, fifth and eighth graders (n=1874).
Setting and subjects:The sample is drawn from the Child and Adolescent Trial for Cardiovascular Health and includes students from California, Louisiana, Minnesota and Texas.
Results:Across the total sample, nutrient intakes met recommended levels except that total fat, saturated fat and sodium consistently exceeded recommendations and calcium and iron intake of girls consistently fell short of recommended levels. Nutrient consumption between third and eighth grade differed by sex and race/ethnicity for a number of nutrients. In particular, females' intake of energy from total fat, calcium, iron, folic acid, vitamin A and vitamin D decreased over time relative to males' intakes, controlling for overall energy intake. Compared with the other ethnic/racial groups, African-American students increased their intake of energy from total fat and saturated fat over time.
Conclusions:Our results suggest that the diets of youth change over time, and negative trends are more common in females than in males and in African-American and Hispanics compared with Caucasian students. Nutrition education and intervention are needed throughout childhood and adolescence with an emphasis on choosing healthful foods. In addition, greater attention to differential opportunities and reinforcements for females and males, and Caucasian, Hispanic and African-American students is warranted.
Dietary intake and barriers to dietary compliance in black type 2 diabetic patients attending primary health-care services
- Gladys Nthangeni, Nelia P Steyn, Marianne Alberts, Krisela Steyn, Naomi S Levitt, Ria Laubscher, Lesley Bourne, Judy Dick, Norman Temple
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 329-338
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Objective:
To determine the dietary intake, practices, knowledge and barriers to dietary compliance of black South African type 2 diabetic patients attending primary health-care services in urban and rural areas.
Design:A cross-sectional survey. Dietary intake was assessed by three 24-hour recalls, and knowledge and practices by means of a structured questionnaire (n=133 men, 155 women). In-depth interviews were then conducted with 25 of the patients to explore their underlying beliefs and feelings with respect to their disease. Trained interviewers measured weight, height and blood pressure. A fasting venous blood sample was collected from each participant in order to evaluate glycaemic control.
Setting:An urban area (Sheshego) and rural areas near Pietersburg in the Northern Province of South Africa.
Subjects:The sample comprised 59 men and 75 women from urban areas and 74 men and 80 women from rural areas. All were over 40 years of age, diagnosed with type 2 diabetes for at least one year, and attended primary health-care services in the study area over a 3-month period in 1998.
Results:Reported dietary results indicate that mean energy intakes were low (<70% of Recommended Dietary Allowance), 8086–8450 kJ day−1 and 6967–7382 kJ day−1 in men and women, respectively. Urban subjects had higher (P<0.05) intakes of animal protein and lower ratios of polyunsaturated fat to saturated fat than rural subjects. The energy distribution of macronutrients was in line with the recommendations for a prudent diet, with fat intake less than 30%, saturated fat less than 10% and carbohydrate intake greater than 55% of total energy intake. In most respects, nutrient intakes resembled a traditional African diet, although fibre intake was low in terms of the recommended 3–6 g/1000 kJ. More than 90% of patients ate three meals a day, yet only 32–47% had a morning snack and 19–27% had a late evening snack. The majority of patients indicated that they followed a special diet, which had been given to them by a doctor or a nurse. Only 3.4–6.1% were treated by diet alone. Poor glycaemic control was found in both urban and rural participants, with more than half of subjects having fasting plasma glucose above 8 mmol l−1 and more than 35% having plasma glycosylated haemoglobin level above 8.6%. High triglyceride levels were found in 24 to 25% of men and in 17 to 18% of women. Obesity (body mass index ≥30 kgm−2) was prevalent in 15 to 16% of men compared with 35 to 47% of women; elevated blood pressure (≥160/95 mmHg) was least prevalent in rural women (25.9%) and most prevalent in urban men (42.4%).
Conclusions:The majority of black, type 2 diabetic patients studied showed poor glycaemic control. Additionally, many had dyslipidaemia, were obese and/or had an elevated blood pressure. Quantitative and qualitative findings indicated that these patients frequently received incorrect and inappropriate dietary advice from health educators.
Dietary intakes of 6–24-month-old urban South Island New Zealand children in relation to biochemical iron status
- Patsy Soh, Elaine L Ferguson, Joanne E McKenzie, Sheila Skeaff, Winsome Parnell, Rosalind S Gibson
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 339-346
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Objective:
To investigate food sources and intakes of iron, and dietary factors associated with serum ferritin levels in 6–24-month-old children.
Design:A cross-sectional survey employing proportionate cluster sampling was conducted in 1998/1999. Dietary intakes were assessed using a non-consecutive 3-day weighed food record. Serum ferritin and C-reactive protein were analysed from non-fasting venepuncture blood samples and general sociodemographic data were collected.
Setting:Cities of Christchurch, Dunedin and Invercargill, New Zealand.
Subjects:Randomly selected healthy 6–24-month-old non-breast-feeding children (n=226).
Results:Total iron intakes (±standard deviation (SD)) among non-breast-feeding infants (<12 months old; n=42) and toddlers (≥12 months old; n=184) were 8.4±2.9 mg day−1 and 5.0±2.5 mg day−1, respectively. Fifteen per cent of infants and 66% of toddlers were at risk of inadequate iron intakes. Main sources of dietary iron were infant formula (60%) for infants and cereals (31%) for toddlers. Meat contributed on average 2% and 10% of dietary iron in the infant and toddler diets, respectively. Dietary factors positively associated with serum ferritin were intakes of iron and vitamin C, whereas intakes of calcium and dietary fibre were negatively associated. For each 1% increase in percentage of energy from iron-fortified formula concomitant with a 1% decrease from dairy products, there was a 4.2% increased odds of replete iron stores (ferritin ≥20 μg l−1).
Conclusions:Toddlers were at higher risk of sub-optimal iron intakes than infants. Results suggest that a diet high in bioavailable iron is important for optimising the iron stores of young children in New Zealand.
The intake of carotenoids in an older Australian population: The Blue Mountains Eye Study
- Fiona Manzi, Victoria Flood, Karen Webb, Paul Mitchell
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 347-352
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Objective:
To describe the distribution of carotenoid intakes and important food sources of carotenoids in the diet of a representative population of older Australians.
Design:Population-based cohort study.
Setting:Two post-code areas in the Blue Mountains, west of Sydney, Australia.
Subjects:We studied 2012 (86%) of the 2334 participants aged 55 + years attending the 5-year follow-up of the cross-sectional Blue Mountains Eye Study (BMES), who completed a detailed semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire. The intakes for five carotenoids were studied: α-carotene, β-carotene, β-cryptoxanthin, lutein and zeaxanthin combined, and lycopene.
Results:The mean intake per day for each carotenoid was: α-carotene, 2675 μg; β-carotene equivalents, 7301 μg; β-cryptoxanthin, 299 μg; lutein and zeaxanthin, 914 μg; lycopene, 3741 μg; retinol, 653 μg; total vitamin A, 1872 μg retinol equivalents. β-Carotene equivalents contribute a substantial proportion of total vitamin A intake (65%) in this population. Women had slightly higher intakes than men for α-carotene, β-carotene equivalents, and lutein and zeaxanthin (P<0.05) . Carrots and pumpkin were the main contributors to α-carotene and β-carotene equivalent intakes. Orange juice, oranges and papaw were the main contributors to β-cryptoxanthin intake. Broccoli, green beans and oranges contributed substantially to lutein and zeaxanthin intake. The main contributors to lycopene intake were tomatoes and bolognaise sauce.
Conclusions:Vitamin A intake in this population is high relative to the Australian Recommended Dietary Intake. Carotenoid intakes, particularly β-carotene, make a substantial contribution, particularly from fruit and vegetables. This study provides important information as a basis for examining associations between dietary carotenoid intake and eye disease in the BMES.
A cohort study of dietary fibre intake and menarche
- Malcolm M Koo, Thomas E Rohan, Meera Jain, John R McLaughlin, Paul N Corey
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 353-360
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Objective:
To evaluate the influence of dietary fibre on menarche in a cohort of pre-menarcheal girls.
Design:Prospective cohort study.
Setting:Ontario, Canada.
Subjects:Free-living pre-menarcheal girls (n = 637), 6 to 14 years of age.
Methodology:Information on dietary intake, physical activity and date of menarche was collected at baseline and was updated annually by self-administered questionnaires for three years. Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the association between dietary fibre and menarche, adjusting for age at entry to the study and potential confounders.
Results:A higher intake of energy-adjusted dietary fibre was associated with a lower risk of (i.e. a later age at) menarche (relative hazard 0.54, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.31–0.94 for highest vs. lowest quartile, P for trend = 0.027). At the fibre component level, a higher intake of energy-adjusted cellulose was associated with a lower risk of menarche (relative hazard 0.45, 95% CI 0.26–0.76, P for trend = 0.009).
Conclusions:The findings are consistent with the hypothesis that pre-menarcheal dietary intake can influence menarche.
Journal Review
Review of African Journal of Food and Nutritional Sciences
- Jacqueline Landman
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 02 January 2007, pp. 361-362
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