Abstract

Switzerland is a multilingual country located between Germany, France and Italy, which differ by dietary habits and related outcomes. We explored differences in food consumption as well as compliance to the Swiss food-based dietary guidelines (FBDG) across the German-, French-, and Italian-speaking regions. The 2014–2015 nationwide cross-sectional survey was conducted among a stratified random sample of 2057 adults aged 18 to 75 years. Trained dietitians assessed food consumption via two non-consecutive 24-h dietary recalls using the international validated software GloboDiet®. Recorded foods and beverages were classified into six groups and 31 subgroups relevant for assessing compliance to the FBDG (Swiss Food Pyramid). Usual daily intake distributions were modelled and weighted for sampling design, non-response, weekdays and season. Participation rate was 38%. Significant differences across regions were observed in 18 of 31 food subgroups (p ≤ 0.01). Weighted mean daily intakes in the German-, French- and Italian-speaking regions were, respectively, 245 g, 155 g, 140 g for soft drinks, 273 g, 214 g, 135 g for coffee, 127 g, 72 g, 109 g for milk, 32 g, 45 g, 43 g for red meat, 18 g, 29 g, 34 g for fish/seafood, 8.1 g, 6.4 g, 3.7 g for butter, and 206 g, 214 g, 168 g for vegetables. The seven FBDGs were followed by <1% of the population. Four in 10 participants met ≥3 FBDG. Eighteen percent of participants ate ≥5 portions of fruit and vegetables a day, without regional differences. Food consumption substantially differed across the three linguistic regions of Switzerland. Adherence to FBDG was uniformly low. This highlights the potential influence of culture on diet. Nutritional education along with public health interventions are needed and may be most efficient if regionally targeted.

Highlights

  • Switzerland is centrally located in Europe at the crossroads between Germany, France and Italy.Despite a small size, the country has three main linguistic regions: German (63%, in the north, east and center), French (23%, in the west) and Italian (8%, in the south) [1]

  • Using data from the first national nutrition survey menuCH, we investigated the differences in food consumption, as well as adherence to national food-based dietary guidelines (FBDG), across the German, French, and Italian-speaking regions of Switzerland

  • Reference from the Swiss Food Pyramid; 2 Thirty-five grams of cooked/prepared meat per day corresponds to the guideline of 2–3 portions of 110 g of any type of raw meat per week; 3 Survey weights corrected for non-response based on six socio-demographic parameters and uneven distribution of 24 h dietary recalls (24HDR) over seasons and weekdays; 4 Differences between linguistic regions were assessed using Wald tests on survey-weighted logistic regression coefficients (* p ≤ 0.001)

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Summary

Introduction

Switzerland is centrally located in Europe at the crossroads between Germany, France and Italy. Scientists and policy makers relied on national agricultural statistics [11,12], regional epidemiologic studies [13,14,15] and assessment of single nutrition-related items in the Swiss Health Survey [16,17]. These data have limitations such as high aggregation or do not allow comparison between the linguistic regions. Using data from the first national nutrition survey menuCH, we investigated the differences in food consumption, as well as adherence to national FBDG, across the German-, French-, and Italian-speaking regions of Switzerland

Study Design and Sampling
Dietary Assessment
Food Grouping and Comparisons to FBDG
Anthropometry and Other Parameters
Quality Controls
Weighting
Statistical Analysis
Ethics
Sample Characteristics
Food Group and Macronutrient Intakes
Recalls
Adherence to FBDG
Discussion
Regional Differences in Food Consumption
Strengths
Limitations
Conclusions
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