Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months

© 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd The consumption of free sugars is directly associated with adiposity and dental caries in early childhood; however, intake data in the first 2 years of life are limited. This cross-sectional analysis aims to identify major food sources of free sugars for Australian...

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Main Authors: Devenish, Gemma, Ytterstad, E., Begley, Andrea, Do, L., Scott, Jane
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/72138
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author Devenish, Gemma
Ytterstad, E.
Begley, Andrea
Do, L.
Scott, Jane
author_facet Devenish, Gemma
Ytterstad, E.
Begley, Andrea
Do, L.
Scott, Jane
author_sort Devenish, Gemma
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd The consumption of free sugars is directly associated with adiposity and dental caries in early childhood; however, intake data in the first 2 years of life are limited. This cross-sectional analysis aims to identify major food sources of free sugars for Australian children aged 12–14 months and investigate factors associated with meeting the World Health Organisation (WHO) Guideline for sugars intake. Three days of nonconsecutive dietary data were collected via a 24-hr recall and 2-day food record for 828 participants. Usual intake of energy, total sugars, and free sugars were estimated, along with food group contributions to free sugars. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to investigate factors associated with exceeding the WHO conservative recommendation that <5% of energy should come from free sugars. Mean free sugars intake was 8.8 (SD 7.7, IQR 3.7–11.6) g/day, contributing 3.6% (SD 2.8, IQR 1.6–4.8) of energy. Only 2.4% of participants exceeded the WHO recommendation that <10% of energy should come from free sugars, with 22.8% of participants exceeding the <5% recommendation. Children from households with greater socio-economic disadvantage (IRSAD <5, OR = 1.94) and in the lowest income bracket (OR = 2.10) were more likely to have intakes =5% of energy. Major food sources of free sugars were commercial infant foods (26.6%), cereal-based products (19.7%), namely, sweet biscuits (8.3%) and cakes (7.6%), followed by yoghurt (9.6%), and fruit and vegetable beverages (7.4%). These findings highlight the substantial contribution of infant foods to free sugars intakes and provide further evidence that dietary intakes are influenced by social determinants.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-721382018-12-13T09:32:59Z Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months Devenish, Gemma Ytterstad, E. Begley, Andrea Do, L. Scott, Jane © 2018 John Wiley & Sons Ltd The consumption of free sugars is directly associated with adiposity and dental caries in early childhood; however, intake data in the first 2 years of life are limited. This cross-sectional analysis aims to identify major food sources of free sugars for Australian children aged 12–14 months and investigate factors associated with meeting the World Health Organisation (WHO) Guideline for sugars intake. Three days of nonconsecutive dietary data were collected via a 24-hr recall and 2-day food record for 828 participants. Usual intake of energy, total sugars, and free sugars were estimated, along with food group contributions to free sugars. Multiple logistic regression analysis was used to investigate factors associated with exceeding the WHO conservative recommendation that <5% of energy should come from free sugars. Mean free sugars intake was 8.8 (SD 7.7, IQR 3.7–11.6) g/day, contributing 3.6% (SD 2.8, IQR 1.6–4.8) of energy. Only 2.4% of participants exceeded the WHO recommendation that <10% of energy should come from free sugars, with 22.8% of participants exceeding the <5% recommendation. Children from households with greater socio-economic disadvantage (IRSAD <5, OR = 1.94) and in the lowest income bracket (OR = 2.10) were more likely to have intakes =5% of energy. Major food sources of free sugars were commercial infant foods (26.6%), cereal-based products (19.7%), namely, sweet biscuits (8.3%) and cakes (7.6%), followed by yoghurt (9.6%), and fruit and vegetable beverages (7.4%). These findings highlight the substantial contribution of infant foods to free sugars intakes and provide further evidence that dietary intakes are influenced by social determinants. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/72138 10.1111/mcn.12692 Wiley-Blackwell Publishing restricted
spellingShingle Devenish, Gemma
Ytterstad, E.
Begley, Andrea
Do, L.
Scott, Jane
Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months
title Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months
title_full Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months
title_fullStr Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months
title_full_unstemmed Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months
title_short Intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in Australian children aged 12–14 months
title_sort intake, sources, and determinants of free sugars intake in australian children aged 12–14 months
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/72138