PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Balanced carbohydrate ratios are associated with improved diet quality in Australia: A nationally representative cross-sectional study.

  • Michelle Blumfield,
  • Andrew McConnell,
  • Tim Cassettari,
  • Peter Petocz,
  • Molly Warner,
  • Vanessa Campos,
  • Kim-Anne Lê,
  • Kaori Minehira,
  • Skye Marshall,
  • Flavia Fayet-Moore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253582
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 7
p. e0253582

Abstract

Read online

BackgroundCarbohydrate quality influences major health outcomes; however, the best criteria to assess carbohydrate quality remain unknown.ObjectiveThe objectives were to: i) evaluate whether a diet that meets a carbohydrate ratio (simple, modified or dual ratio) is associated with higher nutrient intakes and diet quality, and ii) model the impact of substituting carbohydrate foods that meet the proposed ratios in place of foods that do not, on nutrient intakes.DesignA secondary analysis of cross-sectional data from the 2011-12 Australian National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey.Participants/settingNational data from participants aged 2 years and older (n = 12,153).Main outcome measuresRatios were defined as (i) simple ratio, 10:1 (10g carbohydrate:≥1g dietary fiber); (ii) modified ratio, 10:1:2 (10g carbohydrate:≥1g dietary fiber:≤2g free sugars); and (iii) dual ratio, 10:1 & 1:2 (10g carbohydrate:≥1g dietary fiber & ≤2g free sugars per 1g dietary fiber). Ratios were compared to nutrient intakes obtained via automated multiple-pass 24-hour dietary recall and diet quality calculated using the Australian Healthy Eating Index.Statistical analyses performedSubstitution dietary modelling was performed. Data were analyzed using paired and independent sample t-tests.ResultsRatio adherence was highest for simple (50.2% adults; 28.6% children), followed by dual (40.6% adults; 21.7% children), then modified (32.7% adults; 18.6% children) ratios. Participants who met any ratio reported higher nutrient intake and diet quality compared to those who failed to meet the respective ratio (P ConclusionsAll carbohydrate ratios were associated with higher diet quality, with a free sugars constraint in the dual ratio providing the greatest improvements.