Differences in Diet Pattern Adherence by Nativity and Duration of US Residence in the Mexican-American Population

Anastasia Sofianou MSc, Teresa T. Fung ScD, RD, Katherine L. Tucker PhD
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引用次数: 53

Abstract

Literature on the diet of the Mexican-American population suggests that food consumption differs by nativity and duration of residence in the United States. However, no studies have used dietary pattern analysis to investigate these differences. To create dietary patterns, we used principal components analysis on food frequency questionnaire data for all adult respondents of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey years 2003-2006. Four dietary patterns were identified: Western, Healthy, Tomato/Tortilla, and Coffee/Sugar. Least squares means regression was used to test differences in adjusted mean dietary adherence scores among Mexico-born Mexican-American adults residing in the United States for <15 years (n=302), Mexico-born Mexican-American adults residing in the United States for ≥15 years (n=234), US-born Mexican-American adults (n=509), and US-born non-Hispanic whites (n=2,530) aged 18 to 69 years. Mean score for each diet pattern did not differ significantly by duration of US residence category in the Mexico-born Mexican-American population. However, in comparison to all Mexico-born Mexican Americans, US-born Mexican Americans had significantly lower score for the Tomato/Tortilla pattern, and significantly higher score for the Western pattern. Scores for the Healthy pattern were relatively low in all Mexican-American subgroups, indicating low adherence to the Healthy diet. However, Healthy diet scores of Mexico-born Mexican Americans among those aged ≤41 years appeared more similar to those of US-born non-Hispanic whites than US-born Mexican Americans. Education and policy action promoting healthy food access in Hispanic neighborhoods could help limit consumption of Western and Coffee/Sugar diet patterns and promote healthier choices in the Mexican-American population.

墨西哥裔美国人在美国的出生和居住时间对饮食模式依从性的影响
关于墨西哥裔美国人饮食的文献表明,食物消费因出生和在美国居住的时间而异。然而,没有研究使用饮食模式分析来调查这些差异。为了创建饮食模式,我们对2003-2006年全国健康与营养检查调查的所有成年受访者的食物频率问卷数据进行了主成分分析。确定了四种饮食模式:西方,健康,番茄/玉米饼和咖啡/糖。最小二乘均值回归用于检验在美国居住15年的墨西哥出生的墨西哥裔美国成年人(n=302)、在美国居住≥15年的墨西哥出生的墨西哥裔美国成年人(n=234)、在美国出生的墨西哥出生的美国成年人(n=509)和18至69岁的美国出生的非西班牙裔白人(n= 2530)调整后的平均饮食依从性评分的差异。在墨西哥出生的墨西哥裔美国人中,每种饮食模式的平均得分没有因美国居住类别的持续时间而显著差异。然而,与所有在墨西哥出生的墨西哥裔美国人相比,在美国出生的墨西哥裔美国人在番茄/玉米饼模式上的得分明显较低,在西方模式上的得分明显较高。在所有墨西哥裔美国人亚组中,健康模式的得分相对较低,表明对健康饮食的坚持程度较低。然而,在年龄≤41岁的人群中,墨西哥出生的墨西哥裔美国人的健康饮食得分与美国出生的非西班牙裔白人比美国出生的墨西哥裔美国人更相似。在西班牙裔社区推广健康食品的教育和政策行动可以帮助限制西方和咖啡/糖饮食模式的消费,并促进墨西哥裔美国人更健康的选择。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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