Association of dietary factors and other coronary risk factors with social class in women in five Indian cities

被引:11
作者
Singh, RB
Beegom, R
Verma, SP
Haque, M
Singh, R
Mehta, AS
De, AK
Kundu, S
Roy, S
Krishnan, A
Simhadri, H
Paranjpe, NB
Agarwal, N
机构
[1] NKP Salve Inst Med Sci, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India
[2] Med Hosp & Res Ctr, Moradabad, India
[3] Coll Women, Trivandrum, Kerala, India
[4] Appolo Hosp, New Delhi, India
[5] Coll Home Sci, Nagpur, Maharashtra, India
[6] Ctr Nutr, Mumbai, India
[7] SVT Coll Home Sci, Mumbai, India
[8] Ctr Nutr, Calcutta, W Bengal, India
关键词
body mass index; Bombay; Calcutta; central obesity; fruit; India; legume; Morababad; Mumbai; Nagpur; obesity; Tirvadrum; total visible fat; vegetable;
D O I
10.1046/j.1440-6047.2000.00177.x
中图分类号
R15 [营养卫生、食品卫生]; TS201 [基础科学];
学科分类号
100403 ;
摘要
The association between social classes, food intake and coronary risk factors was determined. Cross-sectional surveys were conducted in 6-12 urban streets in each of five cities, each one from five different regions of India using similar methods of dietary intakes and criteria of diagnosis. We randomly selected 3257 women aged 25-64 years inclusive, from Moradabad (n = 902), Trivandrum (n = 760), Calcutta (n = 410), Nagpur (n = 405) and Bombay (n = 780). All subjects, after pooling of data, were divided into social class 1 (n = 985), class 2 (n = 790), class 3 (n = 774), class 4 (n = 602) and class 5 (n = 206) based on various attributes of socioeconomic status. Social class 1 was the highest and 5 was the lowest social class. Social classes 1-3 had greater intake of pro-atherogenic foods; total visible fat, milk and milk products, meat and eggs, as well as sugar and confectionery, compared to social classes 4 and 5. The consumption of wheat, rice, millets, fruits, vegetables and legume/total visible fat ratio were inversely associated with social class. Mean body mass index (BMI), obesity, overweight, central obesity and sedentary lifestyle were also significantly more common among subjects from higher social classes. Spearman's rank correlation showed that bodyweight, BMI, wheat, rice, millets, total visible fat, milk and milk products, meat, eggs, sugar and jaggery intakes were significantly correlated with social class. Social class 5 subjects had a lower intake of all foods and a lower BMI, suggestive of a higher rate of undernutrition among them. The findings indicate that the consumption of pro-atherogenic foods and other coronary risk factors are more common in higher social classes compared to lower social classes.
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页码:298 / 302
页数:5
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