Relationship Between Grocery Shopping Frequency and Home- and Individual-Level Diet Quality Among Low-Income Racial or Ethnic Minority Households With Preschool-Aged Children - 21/09/20

Abstract |
Background |
The home food environment can shape the diets of young children. However, little is known about modifiable factors that influence home food availability and dietary intake.
Objective |
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between grocery shopping frequency with home- and individual-level diet quality.
Design |
This was a secondary, cross-sectional analyses of data from the Study on Children’s Home Food Availability Using TechNology. Data were collected in the homes of participants from November 2014 through March 2016.
Participants/settings |
A purposive sample of 97 low-income African American and Hispanic or Latinx parent–child dyads residing in Chicago, IL, enrolled in the study.
Main outcome measures |
The main outcomes were home- and individual-level diet quality. Healthy Eating Index-2010 (HEI-2010) scores were calculated from home food inventory data collected in participants’ homes to assess home-level diet quality. To assess individual-level diet quality, HEI-2010 scores were based on multiple 24-hour diet recalls from parent–child dyads.
Statistical analyses |
Grocery shopping frequency was examined in relation to diet quality at the home and individual levels. Grocery shopping frequency was defined as the number of times households shopped on a monthly basis (ie, once a month, twice a month, 3 times a month, or 4 times or more a month). Multivariable linear regression analysis, controlling for covariates, tested the relationships between grocery shopping frequency and HEI-2010 total and component scores at the home and individual levels.
Results |
Grocery shopping frequency was positively associated with home-level HEI-2010 scores for total diet, whole grains, and empty calories (higher scores reflect better diet quality) and with individual-level HEI-2010 scores for total and whole fruit (parents only), vegetables (children only), and sodium (children only).
Conclusions |
Grocery shopping frequency was associated with multiple dimensions of diet quality at the home and individual levels. These results offer a potential strategy to intervene on home food availability and individual dietary intake.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Child, Preschool, Diet, Households, Ethnic groups
Plan
| Supplementary materials: The Figure is available at www.jandonline.org. |
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| STATEMENT OF POTENTIAL CONFLICT OF INTEREST No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors. |
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| FUNDING/SUPPORT This study was funded by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development at the National Institutes of Health (Grant No. R21HD080157). Funding for the researcHStart program came from philanthropic support from Debra and Ira Cohen and other generous donors to the University of Chicago Comprehensive Cancer Center. |
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| AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS A. Kong, M. L. Fitzgibbon, C. L. Braunschweig, and A. M. Odoms-Young designed the study. A. Kong and M. A. Antonic collected the data. A. Kong and L. A. Schiffer prepared the data for analyses. A. Kong and J. Banks analyzed the data. A. Kong and J. Banks drafted the manuscript. All authors approved the final version. |
Vol 120 - N° 10
P. 1706 - octobre 2020 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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