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Lookup NU author(s): Louis Goffe, Professor Stephen Rushton, Professor Martin White
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Background Diet is a major contributor to obesity, but the processes that influence intake remain unclear. Understanding the factors driving food consumption at the population scale requires detailed knowledge of the relationships between dietary patterns and socio-demographic factors. Objectively measuring diet is problematic, but food frequency questionnaires (FFQ) are an established, if imperfect, method for population studies. Such data is inherently multifactorial and various methods have been used to reduce dimensionality. We aimed to evaluate the role of socio-demographic factors in determining different dietary patterns using novel methods.Methods Data were from a survey of dietary habits of 5044 adults in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 2001–2002. This included the European Prospective Investigation of Cancer (EPIC) 134 item FFQ and socio-demographic data. We used canonical correspondence analysis (CCA), an extension of correspondence analysis that constrains the ordination to relate FFQ responses to relevant socio-demographic variables. Ordination methods summarise continuous trends according to socio-demographic variables, creating ‘components’ to describe trends in multivariate data. Results can be displayed graphically using scatter plots, showing the position of each food item and arrows, varying in length and direction, to show the strength of influence of each demographic variable.Results Two main axes emerged from the FFQ data, describing dietary patterns. The first axis related to the level of processing; highly processed food items generally scoring low and raw ingredients scoring high. The second axis related to a Mediterranean diet; relevant items (e.g. pasta, rice, fruits and vegetables, cheese, yoghourt and wine) scored high, whereas those related to a traditional British diet (i.e. ‘meat and two veg’) scored low. Food consumption is highly individual but by constraining the ordination with reported age, dietary knowledge, educational attainment, socio-economic status and receipt of welfare benefits, it was possible to show their relationship to eating habits. These correlates accounted for 5.8% of variation, age exerting the strongest influence. Older people showed a strong preference for a British, low-processed food diet. University education was associated with consumption of a low-processed Mediterranean diet, whereas those living in deprived areas were associated with a highly-processed traditional British diet.Discussion CCA provides a robust, descriptive and conceptually superior method for dietary pattern analysis using FFQ data. Results confirm findings of qualitative research, suggesting that diet is strongly culturally patterned among specific, identifiable population subgroups. Such work is limited by cross-sectional data, but CCA may enable better tailoring and targeting of interventions for those at greatest risk from an unhealthy diet.
Author(s): Goffe LA, Rushton SP, White M
Editor(s): Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health
Publication type: Conference Proceedings (inc. Abstract)
Publication status: Published
Conference Name: Society for Social Medicine 57th Annual Scientific Meeting
Year of Conference: 2013
Pages: A1–A84
Print publication date: 11/09/2013
Publisher: BMJ Publishing Group
URL: http://jech.bmj.com/content/67/Suppl_1/A41.1.abstract
DOI: 10.1136/jech-2013-203126.88