Consumption of key food items is associated with excess weight among elementary-school-aged children in a Canadian First Nations community
Authors: Olivier Receveur, Karimou Morou, Katherine Gray-Donald, and Ann C. Macaulay
Overview
Abstract (English)
The present analyses aim to identify differences in selected dimensions of diet quality and quantity across body mass index (BMI) categories for Mohawk children in grades 4 through 6 so as to enhance ongoing community intervention strategies within the Kahnawake School Diabetes Prevention Project (KSDPP). Using 24-hour recalls (n=444), no observable differences in energy intake, percent fat, energy density, or diet diversity across BMI categories were observed. Using a new method, we compared the frequency of use and the amounts consumed for only the most-frequently consumed food items across BMI categories. Compared to normal-weight children, and after adjusting for age, children ”at risk of overweight” consume potato chips more frequently (P=0.017) and crackers less frequently (P=0.153), while overweight children consumed larger portions of french fries (P=0.027). We conclude that, in this group of children, consuming slightly more french fries or potato chips than what is already consumed by normal-weight children appears to compromise diet quality as far as overweight is concerned.
Abstract (French)
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Details
Type | Journal article |
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Author | Olivier Receveur, Karimou Morou, Katherine Gray-Donald, and Ann C. Macaulay |
Publication Year | 2008 |
Title | Consumption of key food items is associated with excess weight among elementary-school-aged children in a Canadian First Nations community |
Volume | 108 |
Journal Name | Journal of the American Dietetic Association |
Number | 2 |
Pages | 362-366 |
Publication Language | English |
- Olivier Receveur
- Olivier Receveur, Karimou Morou, Katherine Gray-Donald, and Ann C. Macaulay
- Consumption of key food items is associated with excess weight among elementary-school-aged children in a Canadian First Nations community
- Journal of the American Dietetic Association
- 108
- 2008
- 2
- 362-366