Dietary habits of Palestinian adolescents in three major governorates in the West Bank: a cross-sectional survey
التاريخ
2010-07-02البيانات الوصفية
عرض كامل للتسجيلةالملخص
The Palestinian society is undergoing changes in their dietary habits and in the prevalence of obesity and
overweight. Palestinian adolescents (aged 10–19 years) make up 24% of the population. Their dietary habits are important,
yet understudied. The 2004 survey of health behaviour in school-aged children in the West Bank and Gaza Strip identified
missing of breakfast and low intake of milk, fruits, and vegetables as the main problems. We investigated food habits in
Palestinian adolescents in three main governorates (administrative divisions) in the West Bank (Ramallah, Nablus, and
Hebron) and the relation between food habits and sociodemographic factors (region, sex, urban or rural residence, standard
of living index, and parents’ education).
Methods We undertook a cross-sectional survey in the three governorates between March 19 and May 8, 2005, in 96 school
classes (34 in Ramallah, 31 in Hebron, and 31 in Nablus) that were selected to be representative of the eighth and ninth
grade classes (students aged 13–15 years). A list including the number of students per classroom in 2004–05 was provided
by the Palestinian Ministry of Education and Higher Education. The classes were divided into nine strata by sex (boys, girls,
and coeducational) and school type (public, UN Relief and Works Agency [UNRWA], and private). The sample was selected
with the single-stage probability proportional-to-size sampling procedure, from each of the nine strata within each
governorate, with the class as the primary sampling unit. All students in the selected classes were invited to participate in
the study. Self-administered questionnaires for students and their parents were used. The students’ questionnaire contained
questions about age, residence, household amenities, meal patterns, and a food frequency list of 42 items without portion
sizes. The parents’ questionnaire gathered household information, including family size and parents’ education. Both
questionnaires were piloted and adjusted before the survey. Data analysis was done with Stata (version 10.1) and adjusted
for design effect. The sample was weighted according to sample and population size in each governorate (inverse of
sampling probability; percentages are weighted and numbers are unweighted), and the analysis was adjusted for possible
dependencies due to cluster design. We used χ² tests to compare frequencies, and t tests or ANOVA to compare means. We
did multivariate linear regression analysis to model the association between food scores and sociodemographic factors.
Findings Of the 3271 students invited, 3071 (94%) consented to participate. 2952 students (1364 boys and 1588 girls) aged
13–15 years were included in the analysis, excluding 119 who were older or younger than this age group. Only 765 (26%) students
had three meals daily; 382 (26%) boys and 814 (51%) girls had breakfast only once or twice per week or less (p<0·0001). As few as
758 (25%) drank milk daily (462 [33%] boys vs 296 [18%] girls; p<0·0001). Around three-quarters ate vegetables daily (984 [73%]
boys vs 1174 [74%] girls; p=0·67). Daily fruit consumption was equally common in boys and girls (841 [59%] vs 915 [55%]; p=0·27).
Daily intake of salty snacks was more common in girls than in boys (1022 [62%] vs 716 [50%]; p=0·0016) whereas daily intake of
regular soft drinks was more common in boys (575 [40%] vs 464 [28%]; p=0·0001). Daily intake of sweets was more common in
girls than in boys (816 [49%] vs 609 [42%]; p=0·0634). Results of multivariate regression analysis showed that residence in Hebron
and low standard of living (based on 16 household amenities) were negatively associated with frequency of intake of animal foods,
foods commonly eaten in highly industrialised countries, dairy products, fruits and vegetables, and sweets and salty snacks, after
adjustment for other sociodemographic factors such as age, sex, parents’ education, and family size.
Interpretation Irregular meal patterns and a low intake of fruits, vegetables, and milk were common in Palestinian
adolescents, especially in groups with low standard of living and those in Hebron. Effective interventions are needed to
establish healthy dietary habits, with an emphasis on vulnerable groups.
The full text of this article has been published in Public Health Nutr (in press). Reproduced with permission from Cambridge University Press.
معرّف المصادر الموحد
http://www.thelancet.com/health-in-the-occupied-palestinian-territory-2010DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/4694المجموعات
- الأبحاث [280 items ]