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Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey

Background: Water consumption as a vital component of the human diet is under-researched in dietary surveys and nutrition studies. Aim: To assess total water and fluid intakes and examine demographic, anthropometric, and dietary factors associated with water consumption in the Australian population....

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Autores principales: Sui, Zhixian, Zheng, Miaobing, Zhang, Man, Rangan, Anna
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5133066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27792184
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu8110678
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author Sui, Zhixian
Zheng, Miaobing
Zhang, Man
Rangan, Anna
author_facet Sui, Zhixian
Zheng, Miaobing
Zhang, Man
Rangan, Anna
author_sort Sui, Zhixian
collection PubMed
description Background: Water consumption as a vital component of the human diet is under-researched in dietary surveys and nutrition studies. Aim: To assess total water and fluid intakes and examine demographic, anthropometric, and dietary factors associated with water consumption in the Australian population. Methods: Dietary intake data from the 2011 to 2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey were used. Usual water, fluid and food and nutrient intakes were estimated from two days of dietary recalls. Total water includes plain drinking water and moisture from all food and beverage sources; total fluids include plain drinking water and other beverages, but not food moisture. Results: The mean (SD) daily total water intakes for children and adolescents aged 2–18 years were 1.7 (0.6) L for males and 1.5 (0.4) L for females, and for adults aged 19 years and over were 2.6 (0.9) L for males and 2.3 (0.7) L for females. The majority of the population failed to meet the Adequate Intake (AI) values for total water intake (82%) and total fluids intake (78%) with the elderly at highest risk (90%–95%). The contributions of plain drinking water, other beverages and food moisture to total water intake were 44%, 27%, and 29%, respectively, among children and adolescents, and 37%, 37% and 25% among adults. The main sources of other beverages were full-fat plain milk and regular soft drinks for children and adolescents, and tea, coffee, and alcoholic drinks for adults. For adults, higher total water intake was associated with lower percent energy from fat, saturated fat, and free sugars, lower sodium and energy-dense nutrient poor food intakes but higher dietary fibre, fruit, vegetable, caffeine, and alcohol intakes. No associations were found between total water consumption and body mass index (BMI) for adults and BMI z-score for children and adolescents. Conclusion: Reported water consumption was below recommendations. Higher water intakes were suggestive of better diet quality.
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spelling pubmed-51330662016-12-11 Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey Sui, Zhixian Zheng, Miaobing Zhang, Man Rangan, Anna Nutrients Article Background: Water consumption as a vital component of the human diet is under-researched in dietary surveys and nutrition studies. Aim: To assess total water and fluid intakes and examine demographic, anthropometric, and dietary factors associated with water consumption in the Australian population. Methods: Dietary intake data from the 2011 to 2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey were used. Usual water, fluid and food and nutrient intakes were estimated from two days of dietary recalls. Total water includes plain drinking water and moisture from all food and beverage sources; total fluids include plain drinking water and other beverages, but not food moisture. Results: The mean (SD) daily total water intakes for children and adolescents aged 2–18 years were 1.7 (0.6) L for males and 1.5 (0.4) L for females, and for adults aged 19 years and over were 2.6 (0.9) L for males and 2.3 (0.7) L for females. The majority of the population failed to meet the Adequate Intake (AI) values for total water intake (82%) and total fluids intake (78%) with the elderly at highest risk (90%–95%). The contributions of plain drinking water, other beverages and food moisture to total water intake were 44%, 27%, and 29%, respectively, among children and adolescents, and 37%, 37% and 25% among adults. The main sources of other beverages were full-fat plain milk and regular soft drinks for children and adolescents, and tea, coffee, and alcoholic drinks for adults. For adults, higher total water intake was associated with lower percent energy from fat, saturated fat, and free sugars, lower sodium and energy-dense nutrient poor food intakes but higher dietary fibre, fruit, vegetable, caffeine, and alcohol intakes. No associations were found between total water consumption and body mass index (BMI) for adults and BMI z-score for children and adolescents. Conclusion: Reported water consumption was below recommendations. Higher water intakes were suggestive of better diet quality. MDPI 2016-10-26 /pmc/articles/PMC5133066/ /pubmed/27792184 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu8110678 Text en © 2016 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sui, Zhixian
Zheng, Miaobing
Zhang, Man
Rangan, Anna
Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey
title Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey
title_full Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey
title_fullStr Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey
title_full_unstemmed Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey
title_short Water and Beverage Consumption: Analysis of the Australian 2011–2012 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey
title_sort water and beverage consumption: analysis of the australian 2011–2012 national nutrition and physical activity survey
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5133066/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27792184
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu8110678
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