Nutrients (Jan 2020)

Change in Diet Quality over 12 Years in the 1946–1951 Cohort of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health

  • Jennifer N. Baldwin,
  • Peta M. Forder,
  • Rebecca L. Haslam,
  • Alexis J. Hure,
  • Deborah J. Loxton,
  • Amanda J. Patterson,
  • Clare E. Collins

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010147
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 147

Abstract

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Understanding patterns of dietary change over time can provide important information regarding population nutrition behaviours. The aims were to investigate change in diet quality over 12 years in a nationally representative sample of women born in 1946−1951 and to identify characteristics of women whose diet quality changed over time. The Australian Recommended Food Score (ARFS) was measured in 2001 (n = 10,629, mean age 52.1 years) and 2013 (n = 9115; n = 8161 for both time points) for the mid-aged cohort from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health. Participants were categorised by tertiles of baseline diet quality and also classified as ‘diet quality worsened’ (ARFS decrease ≤ −4 points, n = 2361), ‘remained stable’ (−3 ≤ change in ARFS ≤ 3 points, n = 3077) or ‘improved’ (ARFS increase ≥ 4 points, n = 2723). On average, ARFS total and subscale scores remained relatively stable over time (mean [SD] change 0.3 [7.6] points) with some regression to the mean. Women whose diet quality worsened were more likely to be highly physically active at baseline compared with women whose diet quality improved (p < 0.001). Among women with poor diet quality initially (lowest baseline ARFS tertile, n = 2451, mean [SD] baseline ARFS 22.8 [4.5] points), almost half (47%, n = 1148) had not improved after 12 years, with women less likely to be in the healthy weight range (41% compared to 44%) and be never smokers (56% versus 62%, p < 0.05) compared with those whose diet improved. Diet quality remained relatively stable over 12 years’ follow up among mid-aged women. Almost half of those with poor baseline diet quality remained poor over time, emphasizing the need to target high-risk groups for nutrition interventions.

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