Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran

Background and Objective: The importance of healthy eating for mental health has been proven in previous studies. In many studies, unhealthy dietary patterns and less nutritious snacks have been associated with depression. This study designed to determine the association of junk foods consumption (J...

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Main Authors: Nasrin Gholami, Behnaz Yaghoubi-Moghaddam, Arezoo Rezazadeh
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences 2018-11-01
Series:Salāmat-i ijtimā̒ī
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.sbmu.ac.ir/en-ch/article/view/22726
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spelling doaj-8037f486f2f740478697545c2959fd4e2021-04-02T15:37:36ZfasShahid Beheshti University of Medical SciencesSalāmat-i ijtimā̒ī2383-30332423-47022018-11-015321722510828Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of TehranNasrin Gholami0Behnaz Yaghoubi-Moghaddam1Arezoo Rezazadeh2BS in Nutrition, Student’s Research Committee Shahid Beheshti university of medical science, Faculty of Nutrition Sciences and Food Technology, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IranBS in Nutrition, Student’s Research Committee Shahid Beheshti university of medical science Faculty of Nutrition Sciences and Food Technology, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IranAssistant Professor, Department of Community Nutrition, Faculty of Nutrition Sciences and Food Technology, Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, IranBackground and Objective: The importance of healthy eating for mental health has been proven in previous studies. In many studies, unhealthy dietary patterns and less nutritious snacks have been associated with depression. This study designed to determine the association of junk foods consumption (JFC) with levels of depression in adolescents living in high and low socio-economic districts of Tehran Materials and Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 200 female adolescents aged 13–18 years were selected through a random sampling from a school in district 2 (as a high socioeconomic status [SES] region) and 18 (as a low SES region) of Tehran. JFC was assessed by a 24-items self-adminstered semi-quantitative F.F.Q that was designed and its face and content validity was approved by Nutrition expert pannel. Depression staus was assessed by a validated “Beck” long form questionnaire through interview. Data were analysed in SPSS-21 software and chi-square test was applied. Results: The mean (SD) age of the adolescents was 16.1 (1.1) years and their total depression score 13.4 (9.5). The mean chocolates, sweets, beverages, puffs, cakes, biscuits, and fast foods consumptions was 4.5 (4), 1.5 (1.5), 4.5 (5.5), 3 (3), 3.4 (3), 2.1 (2.3) and 1.5 (1.3) serving/week, respectively. Also, the mean total JFC was higher in low SES school children (26.7 (15.7) vs. 23.4 (13.1) serving/week). Comparison of schools with low SES with high SES showed higher percentage of adolescents with had moderate and severe depression (26% vs. 12%) and a lower percentage of them had mild depression (25% vs. 41%). But in both districts, higher percentage of those with normal or mild degrees of depression (29.5% vs. 22.5%) were at the lowest tertile and higher percentage of individuals with moderate-to-severe depression (10.5% vs. 4.5%) were at highest tertile of JFC (P<0.05). Conclusion: High consumption of junk food significantly associated with high levels of depression in the studied adolescent girls in both high and low SES group.http://journals.sbmu.ac.ir/en-ch/article/view/22726Junk food, Depression, Adolescents
collection DOAJ
language fas
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nasrin Gholami
Behnaz Yaghoubi-Moghaddam
Arezoo Rezazadeh
spellingShingle Nasrin Gholami
Behnaz Yaghoubi-Moghaddam
Arezoo Rezazadeh
Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran
Salāmat-i ijtimā̒ī
Junk food, Depression, Adolescents
author_facet Nasrin Gholami
Behnaz Yaghoubi-Moghaddam
Arezoo Rezazadeh
author_sort Nasrin Gholami
title Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran
title_short Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran
title_full Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran
title_fullStr Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran
title_full_unstemmed Association of Junk Food Consumption with Depression in Adolescents Living in High and Low Socio-economic Districts of Tehran
title_sort association of junk food consumption with depression in adolescents living in high and low socio-economic districts of tehran
publisher Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences
series Salāmat-i ijtimā̒ī
issn 2383-3033
2423-4702
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Background and Objective: The importance of healthy eating for mental health has been proven in previous studies. In many studies, unhealthy dietary patterns and less nutritious snacks have been associated with depression. This study designed to determine the association of junk foods consumption (JFC) with levels of depression in adolescents living in high and low socio-economic districts of Tehran Materials and Methods: In this cross-sectional study, 200 female adolescents aged 13–18 years were selected through a random sampling from a school in district 2 (as a high socioeconomic status [SES] region) and 18 (as a low SES region) of Tehran. JFC was assessed by a 24-items self-adminstered semi-quantitative F.F.Q that was designed and its face and content validity was approved by Nutrition expert pannel. Depression staus was assessed by a validated “Beck” long form questionnaire through interview. Data were analysed in SPSS-21 software and chi-square test was applied. Results: The mean (SD) age of the adolescents was 16.1 (1.1) years and their total depression score 13.4 (9.5). The mean chocolates, sweets, beverages, puffs, cakes, biscuits, and fast foods consumptions was 4.5 (4), 1.5 (1.5), 4.5 (5.5), 3 (3), 3.4 (3), 2.1 (2.3) and 1.5 (1.3) serving/week, respectively. Also, the mean total JFC was higher in low SES school children (26.7 (15.7) vs. 23.4 (13.1) serving/week). Comparison of schools with low SES with high SES showed higher percentage of adolescents with had moderate and severe depression (26% vs. 12%) and a lower percentage of them had mild depression (25% vs. 41%). But in both districts, higher percentage of those with normal or mild degrees of depression (29.5% vs. 22.5%) were at the lowest tertile and higher percentage of individuals with moderate-to-severe depression (10.5% vs. 4.5%) were at highest tertile of JFC (P<0.05). Conclusion: High consumption of junk food significantly associated with high levels of depression in the studied adolescent girls in both high and low SES group.
topic Junk food, Depression, Adolescents
url http://journals.sbmu.ac.ir/en-ch/article/view/22726
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