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Prospective association between later eating and obesity in school-age children from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS)

Prospective association between later eating and obesity in school-age children from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS)
Prospective association between later eating and obesity in school-age children from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS)
Purpose: Eating later in the day (dinner and evening snacks) may have a role in the development of obesity. However, most studies are cross-sectional and rarely focus on children in Eastern countries. Therefore, we investigated associations between dinner/evening snacks intake and later obesity in a nationally representative Chinese sample.
Methods: A total of 1292 children participating in the ongoing open cohort (CHNS) from 1997 to 2011, with complete 24-hour dietary recall for three consecutive days at 7-8 years and anthropometric data over 2-4 years of follow-up, were included. Dietary recalls recorded food names and size (grams) for each meal or snack consumed. Chinese food composition tables were used to capture energy intake (kcal). “Dinner/evening snack size” was the percentage of total energy intake (%TEI) for dinner or evening snack. “Dinner/evening snack frequency” was the total number of dinners or evening snack over 3 days (0-3 dinners, 0-3 evening snacks). Outcomes (body mass index (BMI); overweight/obesity) were assessed at 10.5 years. Multiple linear and logistic regression was used for estimating the association between later eating and each outcome. Interaction analysis was used to assess gender differences. Adjustment was made for age, gender, residency, parental education, maternal age, physical activity, maternal BMI, snack frequency, TEI and baseline BMI.
Results: Children had 36.0% (SD 9.4%) and 2.1% (SD 5.8%) of TEI for dinner and evening snacks respectively. Average dinner frequency was 3.0 (SD 0.2) times over 3 days, and 98% of children ate dinner every day; average evening snack frequency was 0.3 (SD 0.8) times over 3 days, only 6% of children ate evening snacks on all 3 days, 10% ate them once or twice, and 84% did not have any. Having evening snacks was associated with higher outcomes (BMI: b (95%CI) =0.50 (0.18 0.83) kg/m2 per time/3 days; overweight/obesity: OR (95%CI) =1.74 (1.19 2.55) per time/3 days). No other associations or interactions were found.
Conclusions: We observed that consuming evening snacks, but not dinner, were prospectively associated with obesity. Therefore, it is worth considering later eating behaviours in preventing obesity in children in Eastern countries.
Zou, Mengxuan
c3511a8c-20d7-4627-8b62-3cdea799f558
Northstone, Kate
3992293f-1ea8-409a-b0ea-7fc15220116c
Leary, Sam
7e88b432-83de-4de9-b362-da5fd17f4de5
Zou, Mengxuan
c3511a8c-20d7-4627-8b62-3cdea799f558
Northstone, Kate
3992293f-1ea8-409a-b0ea-7fc15220116c
Leary, Sam
7e88b432-83de-4de9-b362-da5fd17f4de5

Zou, Mengxuan, Northstone, Kate and Leary, Sam (2022) Prospective association between later eating and obesity in school-age children from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS). International Society of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity 2022 Annual Meeting, Phoenix, Arizona, USA, Phoenix, United States. 18 - 21 May 2022. 486 pp .

Record type: Conference or Workshop Item (Poster)

Abstract

Purpose: Eating later in the day (dinner and evening snacks) may have a role in the development of obesity. However, most studies are cross-sectional and rarely focus on children in Eastern countries. Therefore, we investigated associations between dinner/evening snacks intake and later obesity in a nationally representative Chinese sample.
Methods: A total of 1292 children participating in the ongoing open cohort (CHNS) from 1997 to 2011, with complete 24-hour dietary recall for three consecutive days at 7-8 years and anthropometric data over 2-4 years of follow-up, were included. Dietary recalls recorded food names and size (grams) for each meal or snack consumed. Chinese food composition tables were used to capture energy intake (kcal). “Dinner/evening snack size” was the percentage of total energy intake (%TEI) for dinner or evening snack. “Dinner/evening snack frequency” was the total number of dinners or evening snack over 3 days (0-3 dinners, 0-3 evening snacks). Outcomes (body mass index (BMI); overweight/obesity) were assessed at 10.5 years. Multiple linear and logistic regression was used for estimating the association between later eating and each outcome. Interaction analysis was used to assess gender differences. Adjustment was made for age, gender, residency, parental education, maternal age, physical activity, maternal BMI, snack frequency, TEI and baseline BMI.
Results: Children had 36.0% (SD 9.4%) and 2.1% (SD 5.8%) of TEI for dinner and evening snacks respectively. Average dinner frequency was 3.0 (SD 0.2) times over 3 days, and 98% of children ate dinner every day; average evening snack frequency was 0.3 (SD 0.8) times over 3 days, only 6% of children ate evening snacks on all 3 days, 10% ate them once or twice, and 84% did not have any. Having evening snacks was associated with higher outcomes (BMI: b (95%CI) =0.50 (0.18 0.83) kg/m2 per time/3 days; overweight/obesity: OR (95%CI) =1.74 (1.19 2.55) per time/3 days). No other associations or interactions were found.
Conclusions: We observed that consuming evening snacks, but not dinner, were prospectively associated with obesity. Therefore, it is worth considering later eating behaviours in preventing obesity in children in Eastern countries.

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ISBNPA-2022-Program-and-Abstract-Book - FINAL - Version of Record
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More information

Published date: 21 May 2022
Venue - Dates: International Society of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity 2022 Annual Meeting, Phoenix, Arizona, USA, Phoenix, United States, 2022-05-18 - 2022-05-21

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475822
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475822
PURE UUID: 1883ac18-5d90-4e4f-ab2c-17a2dbabd874
ORCID for Mengxuan Zou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1713-6639

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Mar 2023 18:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19

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Contributors

Author: Mengxuan Zou ORCID iD
Author: Kate Northstone
Author: Sam Leary

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