Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults

Abstract Background Mexicans’ adherence to food group’s dietary recommendations is low and an inaccurate self-perception of dietary quality might perpetuate this low adherence. Our aim was to compare the intake and the adherence to the dietary recommendations for several food groups, subgroups, and...

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Main Authors: Carolina Batis, Analí Castellanos-Gutiérrez, Tania C. Aburto, Alejandra Jiménez-Aguilar, Juan A. Rivera, Ivonne Ramírez-Silva
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-06-01
Series:Nutrition Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12937-020-00573-5
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spelling doaj-4407f5b5232a423f81e7581fae68f1552020-11-25T02:51:23ZengBMCNutrition Journal1475-28912020-06-0119111210.1186/s12937-020-00573-5Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adultsCarolina Batis0Analí Castellanos-Gutiérrez1Tania C. Aburto2Alejandra Jiménez-Aguilar3Juan A. Rivera4Ivonne Ramírez-Silva5CONACYT – Health and Nutrition Research Center, National Institute of Public HealthHealth and Nutrition Research Center, National Institute of Public HealthDepartment of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel HillHealth and Nutrition Research Center, National Institute of Public HealthHealth and Nutrition Research Center, National Institute of Public HealthHealth and Nutrition Research Center, National Institute of Public HealthAbstract Background Mexicans’ adherence to food group’s dietary recommendations is low and an inaccurate self-perception of dietary quality might perpetuate this low adherence. Our aim was to compare the intake and the adherence to the dietary recommendations for several food groups, subgroups, and to an overall Mexican Diet Quality Index (MxDQI), among those that perceived their diet as healthy vs. those that did not. Methods We analyzed data from 989 subjects 20–59 y old from the nationally representative Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey 2016. Dietary intake was collected with one 24-h recall and a repeated recall in 82 subjects. Self-perception of dietary quality was evaluated with the following question “Do you consider that your diet is healthy? (yes/no)”. We used the National Cancer Institute method to estimate the usual intake. We compared the mean intake adjusted by sociodemographic variables and the percentage of adherence according to the self-perception of dietary quality among the whole sample and in sociodemographic subpopulations. Results Sixty percent perceived their diet as healthy, and their adherence to recommendations was low [20% for fruits and vegetables, < 8% for legumes, seafood and SSBs, and ~ 50% for processed meats and high in saturated fat and/or added sugar (HSFAS) products]. The mean number of recommendations they met was 2.8 (out of 7) vs. 2.6 among the rest of the population (p > 0.05), and the MxDQI score was 40 vs. 37 (out of 100 points). The only food groups and subgroups with a statistically significant difference between those that perceived their diet as healthy vs. unhealthy were fruits [38 g/d (95% CI 3, 73)], fruit juices [27 g/d (95% CI 2, 52)], industrialized SSBs [− 35 kcal/d (− 70, − 1)] and salty snacks [− 40 kcal/d (− 79, − 1)]. Other differences were small or inconsistent across subgroups of the population. Conclusions Those that perceived their diet as healthy only had a slightly healthier diet than the rest of the population, moreover, their adherence to recommendations was very low. Hence, it is necessary to improve their nutrition knowledge.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12937-020-00573-5PerceptionDiet qualityDietMexican
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carolina Batis
Analí Castellanos-Gutiérrez
Tania C. Aburto
Alejandra Jiménez-Aguilar
Juan A. Rivera
Ivonne Ramírez-Silva
spellingShingle Carolina Batis
Analí Castellanos-Gutiérrez
Tania C. Aburto
Alejandra Jiménez-Aguilar
Juan A. Rivera
Ivonne Ramírez-Silva
Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults
Nutrition Journal
Perception
Diet quality
Diet
Mexican
author_facet Carolina Batis
Analí Castellanos-Gutiérrez
Tania C. Aburto
Alejandra Jiménez-Aguilar
Juan A. Rivera
Ivonne Ramírez-Silva
author_sort Carolina Batis
title Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults
title_short Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults
title_full Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults
title_fullStr Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults
title_full_unstemmed Self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among Mexican adults
title_sort self-perception of dietary quality and adherence to food groups dietary recommendations among mexican adults
publisher BMC
series Nutrition Journal
issn 1475-2891
publishDate 2020-06-01
description Abstract Background Mexicans’ adherence to food group’s dietary recommendations is low and an inaccurate self-perception of dietary quality might perpetuate this low adherence. Our aim was to compare the intake and the adherence to the dietary recommendations for several food groups, subgroups, and to an overall Mexican Diet Quality Index (MxDQI), among those that perceived their diet as healthy vs. those that did not. Methods We analyzed data from 989 subjects 20–59 y old from the nationally representative Mexican National Health and Nutrition Survey 2016. Dietary intake was collected with one 24-h recall and a repeated recall in 82 subjects. Self-perception of dietary quality was evaluated with the following question “Do you consider that your diet is healthy? (yes/no)”. We used the National Cancer Institute method to estimate the usual intake. We compared the mean intake adjusted by sociodemographic variables and the percentage of adherence according to the self-perception of dietary quality among the whole sample and in sociodemographic subpopulations. Results Sixty percent perceived their diet as healthy, and their adherence to recommendations was low [20% for fruits and vegetables, < 8% for legumes, seafood and SSBs, and ~ 50% for processed meats and high in saturated fat and/or added sugar (HSFAS) products]. The mean number of recommendations they met was 2.8 (out of 7) vs. 2.6 among the rest of the population (p > 0.05), and the MxDQI score was 40 vs. 37 (out of 100 points). The only food groups and subgroups with a statistically significant difference between those that perceived their diet as healthy vs. unhealthy were fruits [38 g/d (95% CI 3, 73)], fruit juices [27 g/d (95% CI 2, 52)], industrialized SSBs [− 35 kcal/d (− 70, − 1)] and salty snacks [− 40 kcal/d (− 79, − 1)]. Other differences were small or inconsistent across subgroups of the population. Conclusions Those that perceived their diet as healthy only had a slightly healthier diet than the rest of the population, moreover, their adherence to recommendations was very low. Hence, it is necessary to improve their nutrition knowledge.
topic Perception
Diet quality
Diet
Mexican
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12937-020-00573-5
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