TY - JOUR
T1 - Dietary intakes and dietary patterns among pregnant women in Northwest China
AU - Yang, Jiaomei
AU - Dang, Shaonong
AU - Cheng, Yue
AU - Qiu, Huizhen
AU - Mi, Baibing
AU - Jiang, Yufen
AU - Qu, Pengfei
AU - Zeng, Lingxia
AU - Wang, Quanli
AU - Li, Qiang
AU - Kang, Yijun
AU - Shen, Yuan
AU - Yan, Hong
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© CopyrightThe Authors 2016.
PY - 2017/2/1
Y1 - 2017/2/1
N2 - Objective To describe nutrient intakes, characterize dietary patterns and analyse their associations with sociodemographic characteristics among pregnant women in Shaanxi, China. Design Population-based cross-sectional survey. Setting Twenty counties and ten districts in Shaanxi Province of Northwest China, 2013. Subjects Women (n 7462) were recruited using a stratified multistage random sampling method to report diets during pregnancy, at 0-12 months (median 3 months; 10th-90th percentile, 0-7 months) after delivery. Results Pregnant women had higher intakes of fat, niacin and vitamin E than the nutrient reference values, while most micronutrients such as vitamin A, folate, Ca and Zn were reportedly low. Women in the highest education, occupation and household income groups had higher nutrient intakes than those in the lowest groups. Nutrient intake differences also existed by geographic area, residence and maternal age at delivery. Three dietary patterns were identified: balanced pattern, vegetarian pattern and snacks pattern. Participants with high balanced pattern scores tended to be better educated, wealthier, 25-29 years old at delivery, working outside and living in urban areas and central Shaanxi. Women with high scores on the vegetarian pattern and snacks pattern tended to be in low balanced pattern score groups, and had lower nutrient intakes than those in the high balanced pattern score groups. Conclusions The study suggested that pregnant women in Shaanxi, China had low intakes of most nutrients such as vitamin A, folate and Ca. Dietary patterns and most nutrient intakes varied by sociodemographic characteristics. Targeted programmes are needed to improve dietary intakes and dietary patterns among sociodemographically disadvantaged groups.
AB - Objective To describe nutrient intakes, characterize dietary patterns and analyse their associations with sociodemographic characteristics among pregnant women in Shaanxi, China. Design Population-based cross-sectional survey. Setting Twenty counties and ten districts in Shaanxi Province of Northwest China, 2013. Subjects Women (n 7462) were recruited using a stratified multistage random sampling method to report diets during pregnancy, at 0-12 months (median 3 months; 10th-90th percentile, 0-7 months) after delivery. Results Pregnant women had higher intakes of fat, niacin and vitamin E than the nutrient reference values, while most micronutrients such as vitamin A, folate, Ca and Zn were reportedly low. Women in the highest education, occupation and household income groups had higher nutrient intakes than those in the lowest groups. Nutrient intake differences also existed by geographic area, residence and maternal age at delivery. Three dietary patterns were identified: balanced pattern, vegetarian pattern and snacks pattern. Participants with high balanced pattern scores tended to be better educated, wealthier, 25-29 years old at delivery, working outside and living in urban areas and central Shaanxi. Women with high scores on the vegetarian pattern and snacks pattern tended to be in low balanced pattern score groups, and had lower nutrient intakes than those in the high balanced pattern score groups. Conclusions The study suggested that pregnant women in Shaanxi, China had low intakes of most nutrients such as vitamin A, folate and Ca. Dietary patterns and most nutrient intakes varied by sociodemographic characteristics. Targeted programmes are needed to improve dietary intakes and dietary patterns among sociodemographically disadvantaged groups.
KW - Dietary intake
KW - Dietary pattern
KW - Northwest China
KW - Nutrient intake
KW - Pregnant women
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84984696180
U2 - 10.1017/S1368980016002159
DO - 10.1017/S1368980016002159
M3 - 文章
C2 - 27572074
AN - SCOPUS:84984696180
SN - 1368-9800
VL - 20
SP - 282
EP - 293
JO - Public Health Nutrition
JF - Public Health Nutrition
IS - 2
ER -