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Dietary habits and supplement use in relation to national pregnancy recommendations: data from the EuroPrevall birth cohort

Dietary habits and supplement use in relation to national pregnancy recommendations: data from the EuroPrevall birth cohort
Dietary habits and supplement use in relation to national pregnancy recommendations: data from the EuroPrevall birth cohort
Assessing maternal dietary habits across Europe during pregnancy in relation to their national pregnancy recommendations. A collaborative, multi-centre, birth cohort study in nine European countries was conducted as part of European Union funded EuroPrevall project. Standardised baseline questionnaire data included details of food intake, nutritional supplement use, exposure to cigarette smoke during pregnancy and socio-demographic data. Pregnancy recommendations were collected from all nine countries from the appropriate national organisations. The most commonly taken supplement in pregnancy was folic acid (55.6 % Lithuania-97.8 % Spain) and was favoured by older, well-educated mothers. Vitamin D supplementation across the cohort was very poor (0.3 % Spain-5.1 % Lithuania). There were significant differences in foods consumed in different countries during pregnancy e.g. only 2.7 % Dutch mothers avoided eating peanut, while 44.4 % of British mothers avoided it. Some countries have minimal pregnancy recommendations i.e. Lithuania, Poland and Spain while others have similar, very specific recommendations i.e. UK, the Netherlands, Iceland, Greece. Allergy specific recommendations were associated with food avoidance during pregnancy [relative rate (RR) 1.18 95 % CI 0.02-1.37]. Nutritional supplement recommendations were also associated with avoidance (RR 1.08, 1.00-1.16). Maternal dietary habits and the use of dietary supplements during pregnancy vary significantly across Europe and in some instances may be influenced by national recommendations.
pregnancy recommendations, folic acid, vitamin D, iron
1092-7875
2408-2425
Oliver, E.M.
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Grimshaw, K.E.C.
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Schoemaker, A.A.
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Keil, T.
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McBride, D.
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Sprikkelman, A.B.
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Ragnarsdottir, H.S.
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Trendelenburg, V.
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Emmanouil, E.
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Reche, M.
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Fiocchi, A.
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Fiandor, A.
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Stanczyk-Przyluska, A.
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Wilczynski, J.
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Busacca, M.
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Sigurdardottir, S.T.
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Dubakiene, R.
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Rudzeviciene, O.
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Vlaxos, G.D.
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Beyer, K.
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Roberts, G.
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Oliver, E.M.
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Grimshaw, K.E.C.
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Schoemaker, A.A.
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Keil, T.
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McBride, D.
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Sprikkelman, A.B.
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Ragnarsdottir, H.S.
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Trendelenburg, V.
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Emmanouil, E.
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Reche, M.
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Fiocchi, A.
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Fiandor, A.
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Stanczyk-Przyluska, A.
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Wilczynski, J.
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Busacca, M.
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Sigurdardottir, S.T.
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Dubakiene, R.
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Rudzeviciene, O.
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Vlaxos, G.D.
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Beyer, K.
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Roberts, G.
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Oliver, E.M., Grimshaw, K.E.C., Schoemaker, A.A., Keil, T., McBride, D., Sprikkelman, A.B., Ragnarsdottir, H.S., Trendelenburg, V., Emmanouil, E., Reche, M., Fiocchi, A., Fiandor, A., Stanczyk-Przyluska, A., Wilczynski, J., Busacca, M., Sigurdardottir, S.T., Dubakiene, R., Rudzeviciene, O., Vlaxos, G.D., Beyer, K. and Roberts, G. (2014) Dietary habits and supplement use in relation to national pregnancy recommendations: data from the EuroPrevall birth cohort. Maternal and Child Health Journal, 18 (10), 2408-2425. (doi:10.1007/s10995-014-1480-5). (PMID:24752313)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Assessing maternal dietary habits across Europe during pregnancy in relation to their national pregnancy recommendations. A collaborative, multi-centre, birth cohort study in nine European countries was conducted as part of European Union funded EuroPrevall project. Standardised baseline questionnaire data included details of food intake, nutritional supplement use, exposure to cigarette smoke during pregnancy and socio-demographic data. Pregnancy recommendations were collected from all nine countries from the appropriate national organisations. The most commonly taken supplement in pregnancy was folic acid (55.6 % Lithuania-97.8 % Spain) and was favoured by older, well-educated mothers. Vitamin D supplementation across the cohort was very poor (0.3 % Spain-5.1 % Lithuania). There were significant differences in foods consumed in different countries during pregnancy e.g. only 2.7 % Dutch mothers avoided eating peanut, while 44.4 % of British mothers avoided it. Some countries have minimal pregnancy recommendations i.e. Lithuania, Poland and Spain while others have similar, very specific recommendations i.e. UK, the Netherlands, Iceland, Greece. Allergy specific recommendations were associated with food avoidance during pregnancy [relative rate (RR) 1.18 95 % CI 0.02-1.37]. Nutritional supplement recommendations were also associated with avoidance (RR 1.08, 1.00-1.16). Maternal dietary habits and the use of dietary supplements during pregnancy vary significantly across Europe and in some instances may be influenced by national recommendations.

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OLIVER Date from Euro Prevall - Mat & Child Helath J 2014.pdf - Version of Record
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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 April 2014
Published date: December 2014
Keywords: pregnancy recommendations, folic acid, vitamin D, iron
Organisations: Human Development & Health

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 388720
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/388720
ISSN: 1092-7875
PURE UUID: a4413bf9-58c6-4ab9-aec6-84ffd569d47c
ORCID for G. Roberts: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2252-1248

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Date deposited: 02 Mar 2016 13:52
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:22

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Contributors

Author: E.M. Oliver
Author: K.E.C. Grimshaw
Author: A.A. Schoemaker
Author: T. Keil
Author: D. McBride
Author: A.B. Sprikkelman
Author: H.S. Ragnarsdottir
Author: V. Trendelenburg
Author: E. Emmanouil
Author: M. Reche
Author: A. Fiocchi
Author: A. Fiandor
Author: A. Stanczyk-Przyluska
Author: J. Wilczynski
Author: M. Busacca
Author: S.T. Sigurdardottir
Author: R. Dubakiene
Author: O. Rudzeviciene
Author: G.D. Vlaxos
Author: K. Beyer
Author: G. Roberts ORCID iD

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