European Journal of Clinical Nutrition

January 2000, Volume 54, Issue 1, Pages 73 - 80

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Original Communication
Multivariate analysis of diet among three-year-old children and associations with socio-demographic characteristics

K North, P Emmett & The Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood (ALSPAC) Study Team

Unit of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, Bristol, UK    

Correspondence to: K North , Unit of Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 24 Tyndall Avenue, Bristol BS8 1TQ, UK.
E-mail: Kate.North@bris.ac.uk .    

Guarantor: Professor J Golding, director of ALSPAC.

Contributors: KN was responsible for the data analysis. KN and PE co-wrote the paper. The ALSPAC Study Team contribute to all aspects of running and maintaining a large longitudinal study.



Keywords
dietary patterns;   preschool children;   principal components analysis

Abstract

Study objective: The study of the whole diet in combination rather than the consumption of individual food items or the intake of specific nutrients could be enlightening. This has been previously performed using principal components analysis (PCA) on adult diets but not on those of children.

Design: The frequency of consumption of a range of food items was recorded for 10,139 3-y-old children by their mothers using self-completion postal questionnaires. These children form part of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood (ALSPAC).

Methods: PCA was performed to identify individual dietary types which were then related to various socio-economic and demographic characteristics.

Results: Four distinct dietary components were obtained explaining 23.5% of the total variation in the sample, and the socio-demographic characteristics of the sample were related to them. The first represented a diet based on convenience foods and was associated with younger, less educated mothers and the presence of older siblings. The second was associated with a high consumption of foods currently considered to be healthy and was particularly related to vegetarian mothers and higher education levels. The third component described the established British ‘meat and two veg’ diet and was associated with girls and children with no older siblings, while the fourth had high loadings for snack and finger foods and was related to socially advantaged conditions and the presence of older siblings.

Conclusions: Identifiable groups of mothers were associated with feeding their child each of the four dietary types, supporting the hypothesis that social, demographic and lifestyle factors relating to the mother have an influence on the early eating patterns of children. This analysis will form a basis for the future study of various childhood outcomes including growth, health and development.

Sponsorship: University of Bristol

European Journal of Clinical Nutrition (2000) 54, 73-80

Received 26 June 1999; Revised 2 August 1999; Accepted 6 August 1999

© Macmillan Publishers Ltd 2000