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Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years

Public health bodies in many countries are attempting to increase population-wide habitual consumption of whole grains. Limited data on dietary habits exist in Singaporean children. The present study therefore aimed to assess whole grain consumption patterns in Singaporean children and compare these...

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Autores principales: Neo, Jia En, Binte Mohamed Salleh, Saihah, Toh, Yun Xuan, How, Kesslyn Yan Ling, Tee, Mervin, Mann, Kay, Hopkins, Sinead, Thielecke, Frank, Seal, Chris J., Brownlee, Iain A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27547396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jns.2016.25
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author Neo, Jia En
Binte Mohamed Salleh, Saihah
Toh, Yun Xuan
How, Kesslyn Yan Ling
Tee, Mervin
Mann, Kay
Hopkins, Sinead
Thielecke, Frank
Seal, Chris J.
Brownlee, Iain A.
author_facet Neo, Jia En
Binte Mohamed Salleh, Saihah
Toh, Yun Xuan
How, Kesslyn Yan Ling
Tee, Mervin
Mann, Kay
Hopkins, Sinead
Thielecke, Frank
Seal, Chris J.
Brownlee, Iain A.
author_sort Neo, Jia En
collection PubMed
description Public health bodies in many countries are attempting to increase population-wide habitual consumption of whole grains. Limited data on dietary habits exist in Singaporean children. The present study therefore aimed to assess whole grain consumption patterns in Singaporean children and compare these with dietary intake, physical activity and health parameters. Dietary intake (assessed by duplicate, multipass, 24-h food recalls), physical activity (by questionnaire) and anthropometric measurements were collected from a cross-section of 561 Singaporean children aged 6–12 years. Intake of whole grains was evaluated using estimates of portion size and international food composition data. Only 38·3 % of participants reported consuming whole grains during the dietary data collection days. Median intake of whole grains in consumers was 15·3 (interquartile range 5·4–34·8) g/d. The most commonly consumed whole-grain food groups were rice (29·5 %), wholemeal bread (28·9 %) and ready-to-eat breakfast cereals (18·8 %). A significantly lower proportion of Malay children (seven out of fifty-eight; P < 0·0001) consumed whole grains than children of other ethnicities. Only 6 % of all children consumed the amount of whole grains most commonly associated with improved health outcomes (48 g/d). There was no relationship between whole grain consumption patterns and BMI, waist circumference or physical activity but higher whole grain intake was associated with increased fruit, vegetable and dairy product consumption (P < 0·001). These findings demonstrate that consumption of whole grain foods is low at a population level and infrequent in Singaporean children. Future drives to increase whole-grain food consumption in this population are likely to require input from multiple stakeholders.
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spelling pubmed-49761132016-08-19 Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years Neo, Jia En Binte Mohamed Salleh, Saihah Toh, Yun Xuan How, Kesslyn Yan Ling Tee, Mervin Mann, Kay Hopkins, Sinead Thielecke, Frank Seal, Chris J. Brownlee, Iain A. J Nutr Sci Research Article Public health bodies in many countries are attempting to increase population-wide habitual consumption of whole grains. Limited data on dietary habits exist in Singaporean children. The present study therefore aimed to assess whole grain consumption patterns in Singaporean children and compare these with dietary intake, physical activity and health parameters. Dietary intake (assessed by duplicate, multipass, 24-h food recalls), physical activity (by questionnaire) and anthropometric measurements were collected from a cross-section of 561 Singaporean children aged 6–12 years. Intake of whole grains was evaluated using estimates of portion size and international food composition data. Only 38·3 % of participants reported consuming whole grains during the dietary data collection days. Median intake of whole grains in consumers was 15·3 (interquartile range 5·4–34·8) g/d. The most commonly consumed whole-grain food groups were rice (29·5 %), wholemeal bread (28·9 %) and ready-to-eat breakfast cereals (18·8 %). A significantly lower proportion of Malay children (seven out of fifty-eight; P < 0·0001) consumed whole grains than children of other ethnicities. Only 6 % of all children consumed the amount of whole grains most commonly associated with improved health outcomes (48 g/d). There was no relationship between whole grain consumption patterns and BMI, waist circumference or physical activity but higher whole grain intake was associated with increased fruit, vegetable and dairy product consumption (P < 0·001). These findings demonstrate that consumption of whole grain foods is low at a population level and infrequent in Singaporean children. Future drives to increase whole-grain food consumption in this population are likely to require input from multiple stakeholders. Cambridge University Press 2016-08-04 /pmc/articles/PMC4976113/ /pubmed/27547396 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jns.2016.25 Text en © The Author(s) 2016 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Neo, Jia En
Binte Mohamed Salleh, Saihah
Toh, Yun Xuan
How, Kesslyn Yan Ling
Tee, Mervin
Mann, Kay
Hopkins, Sinead
Thielecke, Frank
Seal, Chris J.
Brownlee, Iain A.
Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years
title Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years
title_full Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years
title_fullStr Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years
title_full_unstemmed Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years
title_short Whole-grain food consumption in Singaporean children aged 6–12 years
title_sort whole-grain food consumption in singaporean children aged 6–12 years
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4976113/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27547396
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/jns.2016.25
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