Dietary quality among men and women in 187 countries in 1990 and 2010: a systematic assessment
University of Cambridge · MRC Epidemiology Unit · +6 more institutions
Abstract
Healthy dietary patterns are a global priority to reduce non-communicable diseases. Yet neither worldwide patterns of diets nor their trends with time are well established. We aimed to characterise global changes (or trends) in dietary patterns nationally and regionally and to assess heterogeneity by age, sex, national income, and type of dietary pattern.
In this systematic assessment, we evaluated global consumption of key dietary items (foods and nutrients) by region, nation, age, and sex in 1990 and 2010. Consumption data were evaluated from 325 surveys (71·7% nationally representative) covering 88·7% of the global adult population. Two types of dietary pattern were assessed: one reflecting greater consumption of ten healthy dietary items and the other based on lesser consumption of seven unhealthy dietary items. The mean intakes of each dietary factor were divided into quintiles, and each quintile was assigned an ordinal score, with higher scores being equivalent to healthier diets (range 0-100). The dietary patterns were assessed by hierarchical linear regression including country, age, sex, national income, and time as exploratory variables.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 64.00
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 40
Authors
7- FIFumiaki ImamuraCorresponding
University of Cambridge, MRC Epidemiology Unit, Medical Research Council
- RMRenata Micha
Agricultural University of Athens, Tufts University
- SKShahab Khatibzadeh
Harvard University
- SFSaman Fahimi
Massachusetts Department of Public Health, Harvard University, Institute of Public Health Bengaluru
- PSPeilin Shi
Tufts University
Topics & keywords
- Nutrition transition
- Demography
- Medicine
- Environmental health
- Population
- Consumption (sociology)
- Body mass index
- Overweight
- No poverty