Summaries of Must-Read Clinical Literature, Guidelines, and FDA Actions
Assessing the Diet Quality of US Children
Am J Clin Nutrit; ePub 2018 Dec 29; Thomson, et al
The diet quality of US children remains low, with continued disparities across some socioeconomic populations, a recent study found. Researchers used 3 cycles of NHANES dietary data sets (2009‒2010, 2011‒2012, and 2013‒2014) to calculate Healthy Eating Index 2015 (HEI-2015) total and component scores by use of the population ratio method for children aged 2‒18 years (n=9,000). Diet-quality scores were computed overall and by age (2‒5, 6‒11, and 12‒18 years), gender, race or ethnicity, and family poverty-to-income ratio. They found:
- The HEI-2015 total mean score for children overall was 54.9.
- As the age group increased, the total scores decreased, with the total mean score significantly higher for children in the youngest group vs the 2 older age groups.
- The total mean score was significantly lower for non-Hispanic black children compared with Mexican American children, other Hispanic children, and children of other races.
- The total mean score was significantly lower for non-Hispanic white children vs Mexican-American children.
- Notable differences in the total mean scores occurred within age and race or ethnicity classes.
Thomson JL, Tussing-Humphreys LM, Goodman MH, Landry AS. Diet quality in a nationally representative sample of American children by sociodemographic characteristics. [Published online ahead of print December 29, 2018]. Am J Clin Nutrit. doi:10.1093/ajcn/nqy284.
This Week's Must Reads
Intensive BP Control & Risk of Dementia, JAMA; ePub 2019 Jan 28; SPRINT MIND Investigators
Outpatient Care for Adults With Primary Care, JAMA Intern Med; ePub 2019 Jan 28; Levine, et al
Antibiotic Therapy in Patients with Asthma, JAMA Intern Med; ePub 2019 Jan 28; Stefan, et al
Outpatient Benzodiazepine Prescribing in US, JAMA Netw Open; 2019 Jan 25; Agarwal, et al
Reduction of Readmissions Through Primary Care, JAMA Netw Open; 2019 Jan 25; Wiest, et al