Abstract

AimTo describe dietary patterns in the Argentinian population and their association with sociodemographic characteristics.MethodsCross-sectional analysis of Argentina's food consumption and sociodemographic data of 1,266 men and women between 15 and 65 years from the Latin American Study of Nutrition and Health carried out between March 2014 and December 2015. Dietary patterns were identified by using factor analysis and median factor scores were calculated for gender, age, region, body mass index (BMI), socioeconomic, education, and physical activity categories.ResultsFive dietary patterns were identified. Western, Local Western, and Rural were generally characterized by high consumptions of animal fats, sugar-sweetened beverages, meats or processed meats, pizza and empanadas, sweets, pastries, and low consumption of fruits and vegetables. Traditional pattern was mainly characterized by consumption of oils, starchy vegetables, and red meat and Sweet Prudent by milk and yogurt, vegetables, fruit, artificially sweetened beverages, sweets, and cookies. Higher adherence to the Sweet Prudent pattern was observed in women, in people who meet physical activity guidelines and higher socioeconomic and educational levels. Higher adherence to traditional pattern was only observed for men. Higher adherence to the rest of the patterns was observed mostly by men, young, leaner, lower socioeconomic, and educational levels, not meeting physical activity guidelines, from the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires or northern regions.ConclusionFood consumption in Argentina is expressed in a diversity of dietary patterns. Men, younger, and sedentary individuals, with lower socioeconomic and educational level, from the metropolitan area of Buenos Aires and northern regions, seem to have higher adherence to least healthy dietary patterns.

Highlights

  • Diet is among the most important modifiable risk factors for morbidity and mortality [1]

  • This study aimed to describe dietary patterns in the Argentinian population and their association with sociodemographic characteristics

  • A higher proportion of the sample belonged to the Metropolitan Area of Buenos Aires (AMBA) region (37%), followed by the Pampa region (29.5%), whereas a small proportion belonged to the Patagonia region (3.5%)

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Summary

Introduction

Diet is among the most important modifiable risk factors for morbidity and mortality [1]. Understanding population food consumption is a key to promote changes in dietary habits as well as identifying the risk groups. Study has focused on individual food or nutrients as well as other reductionist metrics such as calories or total fats [2]. Food consumption occurs in different complex combinations of diverse foods and beverages across time to compose the overall diet. For this reason, nutrition epidemiology has shifted from individual food and nutrients to dietary pattern analysis [3, 4]. A priori-based dietary pattern analysis uses scores or indexes to measure subject adherence to a predefined dietary pattern. A wide variety of indexes have been developed that commonly assess adherence to the Mediterranean diet, diet diversity, or compliance with dietary guidelines [7, 8]

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