Abstract

BackgroundAlthough ‘unhealthy’ diet is a well-known risk factor for non-communicable diseases, its relationship with socio-economic status (SES) has not been fully investigated. Moreover, the available research has largely been conducted in countries at high levels of human development. This is the first study to examine relationships among dietary patterns and SES of children from countries spanning a wide range of human development.MethodsThis was a multinational cross-sectional study among 9–11 year-old children (n = 6808) from urban/peri-urban sites across 12 countries. Self-reported food frequency questionnaires were used to determine the children’s dietary patterns. Principal Components Analysis was employed to create two component scores representing ‘unhealthy’ and ‘healthy’ dietary patterns. Multilevel models accounting for clustering at the school and site level were used to examine the relationships among dietary patterns and SES.ResultsThe mean age of participants in this study (53.7% girls) was 10.4 years. Largest proportions of total variance in dietary patterns occurred at the individual, site, and school levels (individual, school, site: 62.8%; 10.8%; 26.4% for unhealthy diet pattern (UDP) and 88.9%; 3.7%; 7.4%) for healthy diet pattern (HDP) respectively. There were significant negative ‘unhealthy’ diet-SES gradients in 7 countries and positive ‘healthy’ diet-SES gradients in 5. Within country diet-SES gradients did not significantly differ by HDI. Compared to participants in the highest SES groups, unhealthy diet pattern scores were significantly higher among those in the lowest within-country SES groups in 8 countries: odds ratios for Australia (2.69; 95% CI: 1.33–5.42), Canada (4.09; 95% CI: 2.02–8.27), Finland (2.82; 95% CI: 1.27–6.22), USA (4.31; 95% CI: 2.20–8.45), Portugal (2.09; 95% CI: 1.06–4.11), South Africa (2.77; 95% CI: 1.22–6.28), India (1.88; 95% CI: 1.12–3.15) and Kenya (3.35; 95% CI: 1.91–5.87).ConclusionsThis study provides evidence of diet-SES gradients across all levels of human development and that lower within-country SES is strongly related to unhealthy dietary patterns. Consistency in within-country diet-SES gradients suggest that interventions and public health strategies aimed at improving dietary patterns among children may be similarly employed globally. However, future studies should seek to replicate these findings in more representative samples extended to more rural representation.

Highlights

  • ‘unhealthy’ diet is a well-known risk factor for non-communicable diseases, its relationship with socio-economic status (SES) has not been fully investigated

  • Our findings showed that there were no significant sex differences in within-country income gradients for either outcome (p for sex-by-income level interaction = 0.5, unhealthy diet pattern (UDP); p = 0.6, healthy diet pattern (HDP)); results were pooled for presentation

  • We found no significant Human development index (HDI) (UDP, p = 0.4; HDP, p = 0.9) nor HDI-by-income level interactions (UDP, p = 0.9 and HDP, P = 0.2) effects on dietary pattern scores

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Summary

Introduction

‘unhealthy’ diet is a well-known risk factor for non-communicable diseases, its relationship with socio-economic status (SES) has not been fully investigated. The available research has largely been conducted in countries at high levels of human development. Consistent with the theory of an epidemiologic transition [14], it is plausible to speculate that a reverse relationship would be observed in low-middle-income countries (LMICs), where rapid urbanization has accelerated a nutrition transition [2, 15]. In this setting, high income groups may consume a more energy-dense or unhealthy diet than low-income groups [12, 16]. Our group recently demonstrated the presence of an epidemiological transition in obesity by showing a strong relationship between childhood obesity and SES which was differentially affected by each country’s level of human development (HDI) [17]

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