Nutrients (Nov 2020)

Dietary Patterns, Their Nutrients, and Associations with Socio-Demographic and Lifestyle Factors in Older New Zealand Adults

  • Karen Mumme,
  • Cathryn Conlon,
  • Pamela von Hurst,
  • Beatrix Jones,
  • Welma Stonehouse,
  • Anne-Louise M. Heath,
  • Jane Coad,
  • Crystal Haskell-Ramsay,
  • Jamie de Seymour,
  • Kathryn Beck

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12113425
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 3425

Abstract

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Dietary patterns analyse combinations of foods eaten. This cross-sectional study identified dietary patterns and their nutrients. Associations between dietary patterns and socio-demographic and lifestyle factors were examined in older New Zealand adults. Dietary data (109-item food frequency questionnaire) from the Researching Eating, Activity and Cognitive Health (REACH) study (n = 367, 36% male, mean age = 70 years) were collapsed into 57 food groups. Using principal component analysis, three dietary patterns explained 18% of the variation in diet. Dietary pattern associations with sex, age, employment, living situation, education, deprivation score, physical activity, alcohol, and smoking, along with energy-adjusted nutrient intakes, were investigated using regression analysis. Higher ‘Mediterranean’ dietary pattern scores were associated with being female, higher physical activity, and higher education (p 2 = 0.07). Higher ‘Western’ pattern scores were associated with being male, higher alcohol intake, living with others, and secondary education (p 2 = 0.16). Higher ‘prudent’ pattern scores were associated with higher physical activity and lower alcohol intake (p 2 = 0.15). There were positive associations between beta-carotene equivalents, vitamin E, and folate and ‘Mediterranean’ dietary pattern scores (p 2 ≥ 0.26); energy intake and ‘Western’ scores (p 2 = 0.43); and fibre and carbohydrate and ‘prudent’ scores (p 2 ≥ 0.25). Socio-demographic and lifestyle factors were associated with dietary patterns. Understanding relationships between these characteristics and dietary patterns can assist in health promotion.

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