Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians

Objective: To examine soft drink consumption across age, gender, socioeconomic, and body weight status groups within an adolescent and adult population. Design: Cross-sectional telephone survey. Participants: Western Australian residents (n = 1,015) aged 16–65 years, selected through random dialing....

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Main Authors: French, S., Rosenberg, M., Wood, L., Maitland, C., Shilton, T., Pratt, Steve, Buzzacott, P.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12931
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author French, S.
Rosenberg, M.
Wood, L.
Maitland, C.
Shilton, T.
Pratt, Steve
Buzzacott, P.
author_facet French, S.
Rosenberg, M.
Wood, L.
Maitland, C.
Shilton, T.
Pratt, Steve
Buzzacott, P.
author_sort French, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: To examine soft drink consumption across age, gender, socioeconomic, and body weight status groups within an adolescent and adult population. Design: Cross-sectional telephone survey. Participants: Western Australian residents (n = 1,015) aged 16–65 years, selected through random dialing. Variables Measured: Frequency and quantity of sugar-sweetened and diet soft drinks consumption, sociodemographic characteristics. Analysis: The Kruskal-Wallis test of association for non-parametric data was used to explore differences in quantity of soft drinks consumed. Logistic regression models used to explore type of soft drinks consumed by sociodemographic factors and weight status. Results: A greater proportion of females consumed no soft drinks (29.2%) or diet soft drinks only (20.9%), compared with males (21.7% and 14.0%, respectively) (P < .05). The youngest (16–24 years) consumers of sugar-sweetened soft drinks consumed twice (median, 3 cups/wk) as much as the eldest (55–65 years) (1.5 cups/wk) (P < .05). Respondents classified as overweight or obese were 1.7 times more likely to drink both sugar-sweetened and diet soft drinks compared with other respondents (P = .02). Conclusions and Implications: This study identified a high prevalence of soft drink consumption within the population (74.5%). These results identify young people (16–24 years of age), as well as males, as population groups to target through public health interventions to reduce soft drink consumption.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-129312017-09-13T15:00:24Z Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians French, S. Rosenberg, M. Wood, L. Maitland, C. Shilton, T. Pratt, Steve Buzzacott, P. Objective: To examine soft drink consumption across age, gender, socioeconomic, and body weight status groups within an adolescent and adult population. Design: Cross-sectional telephone survey. Participants: Western Australian residents (n = 1,015) aged 16–65 years, selected through random dialing. Variables Measured: Frequency and quantity of sugar-sweetened and diet soft drinks consumption, sociodemographic characteristics. Analysis: The Kruskal-Wallis test of association for non-parametric data was used to explore differences in quantity of soft drinks consumed. Logistic regression models used to explore type of soft drinks consumed by sociodemographic factors and weight status. Results: A greater proportion of females consumed no soft drinks (29.2%) or diet soft drinks only (20.9%), compared with males (21.7% and 14.0%, respectively) (P < .05). The youngest (16–24 years) consumers of sugar-sweetened soft drinks consumed twice (median, 3 cups/wk) as much as the eldest (55–65 years) (1.5 cups/wk) (P < .05). Respondents classified as overweight or obese were 1.7 times more likely to drink both sugar-sweetened and diet soft drinks compared with other respondents (P = .02). Conclusions and Implications: This study identified a high prevalence of soft drink consumption within the population (74.5%). These results identify young people (16–24 years of age), as well as males, as population groups to target through public health interventions to reduce soft drink consumption. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12931 10.1016/j.jneb.2013.03.010 restricted
spellingShingle French, S.
Rosenberg, M.
Wood, L.
Maitland, C.
Shilton, T.
Pratt, Steve
Buzzacott, P.
Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians
title Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians
title_full Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians
title_fullStr Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians
title_full_unstemmed Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians
title_short Soft drink consumption patterns among Western Australians
title_sort soft drink consumption patterns among western australians
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12931