Dietary patterns and associated risk factors among school age children in urban Ghana
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Date
2018
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
BMC Nutrition
Abstract
Background: Understanding dietary patterns in the study of diet-disease relationships is crucial for designing
dietary behavior interventions. This study aimed to determine associations between dietary patterns and
background characteristics among school-age children (9–15 years) in Ghana.
Methods: A cross-sectional sample of 487 urban-dwelling children aged 9–15 years was recruited using simple random
sampling from 24 schools (12 private and 12 public) in the Ga-East Municipality in Southern Ghana. A 7-day food
frequency questionnaire was used to record children’s consumption of over 100 unique food items. Principal component
analyses based on 14 food groups were used to describe emerging dietary patterns (DP). BMI-for-age z-scores segregated
by sex were derived using WHO Anthro plus software. Linear regression was used to test associations between ‘diet
factor’ scores, and weight status controlling for age.
Results: Four DPs were identified that explained 53.2% of the variation in the diets of children: (1) energy dense; (2) starchy
root staples and vegetables; (3) cereal-grain staples and poultry; and (4) fish & seafood. Energy-dense DP characterized by
processed meat, fried foods, and sugary foods was associated with child overweight/obese status after controlling for age,
sex, SES, and school type [F(5, 484) = 6.868, p < 0.001]. Starchy root with vegetable DP was negatively associated with
overweight/obese status, private school attendance, and higher SES after controlling for age at the bivariate level. However,
the relationship between ‘starchy root staples and vegetables’ DP and overweight/obese status lost significance after
controlling for other covariates.
Conclusion: Our data identified energy-dense dietary patterns to be significantly associated with childhood overweight
and obesity. Targeted dietary messages are required to address energy-dense dietary patterns among school-age
children.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Dietary patterns, Dietary behaviour, School-age children, Ghana, Overweight, Energy-dense