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Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults

Using a representative sample of older Americans, this project examines the association between dietary quality and short-term change in mobility limitations and whether this association differs for the food insecure or those receiving nutritional assistance. The sample was drawn from the 2012 Healt...

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Autores principales: Bishop, Nicholas, Ullevig, Sarah, Zuniga, Krystle, Wang, Kaipeng, Tucker, Julia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7741486/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.773
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author Bishop, Nicholas
Ullevig, Sarah
Zuniga, Krystle
Wang, Kaipeng
Tucker, Julia
author_facet Bishop, Nicholas
Ullevig, Sarah
Zuniga, Krystle
Wang, Kaipeng
Tucker, Julia
author_sort Bishop, Nicholas
collection PubMed
description Using a representative sample of older Americans, this project examines the association between dietary quality and short-term change in mobility limitations and whether this association differs for the food insecure or those receiving nutritional assistance. The sample was drawn from the 2012 Health and Retirement Study and 2013 Health Care and Nutrition Study and included 3,779 respondents representing a population of 37,217,566 adults aged 65 and older. Mobility limitations were operationalized as a log-transformed count of 11 indicators of limitation in physical mobility. Dietary quality was measured using the Alternative Healthy Eating Index-2010 (AHEI-2010) based on responses to a food frequency questionnaire. Food insecurity was a binary measure based on the USDA six-item short form. Nutritional assistance included receipt of supplemental food from sources such as food banks and/or reporting receipt of SNAP benefits (1=yes, 0=no). Autoregressive multiple regression was used to test whether AHEI-2010 predicted change in mobility limitations from 2012-2014 and whether food insecurity or receipt of supplemental food moderated this relationship. Around 10.7% of older adults were food insecure, and around 17.5% reported receipt of nutritional assistance. AHEI-2010 was associated with a slower decline in mobility limitations over the 2-year observational window (b=-0.014, SE=.003, p<.001), but food insecurity nor nutritional assistance were associated with changing mobility limitation, either directly or as moderators of the association between progressing limitations and AHEI-2010. These preliminary findings suggest dietary quality may be associated with disablement among older adults regardless of food environment.
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spelling pubmed-77414862020-12-21 Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults Bishop, Nicholas Ullevig, Sarah Zuniga, Krystle Wang, Kaipeng Tucker, Julia Innov Aging Abstracts Using a representative sample of older Americans, this project examines the association between dietary quality and short-term change in mobility limitations and whether this association differs for the food insecure or those receiving nutritional assistance. The sample was drawn from the 2012 Health and Retirement Study and 2013 Health Care and Nutrition Study and included 3,779 respondents representing a population of 37,217,566 adults aged 65 and older. Mobility limitations were operationalized as a log-transformed count of 11 indicators of limitation in physical mobility. Dietary quality was measured using the Alternative Healthy Eating Index-2010 (AHEI-2010) based on responses to a food frequency questionnaire. Food insecurity was a binary measure based on the USDA six-item short form. Nutritional assistance included receipt of supplemental food from sources such as food banks and/or reporting receipt of SNAP benefits (1=yes, 0=no). Autoregressive multiple regression was used to test whether AHEI-2010 predicted change in mobility limitations from 2012-2014 and whether food insecurity or receipt of supplemental food moderated this relationship. Around 10.7% of older adults were food insecure, and around 17.5% reported receipt of nutritional assistance. AHEI-2010 was associated with a slower decline in mobility limitations over the 2-year observational window (b=-0.014, SE=.003, p<.001), but food insecurity nor nutritional assistance were associated with changing mobility limitation, either directly or as moderators of the association between progressing limitations and AHEI-2010. These preliminary findings suggest dietary quality may be associated with disablement among older adults regardless of food environment. Oxford University Press 2020-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7741486/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.773 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Bishop, Nicholas
Ullevig, Sarah
Zuniga, Krystle
Wang, Kaipeng
Tucker, Julia
Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults
title Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults
title_full Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults
title_fullStr Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults
title_full_unstemmed Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults
title_short Dietary Quality Predicts Short-Term Change in Mobility Limitations in Older U.S. Adults
title_sort dietary quality predicts short-term change in mobility limitations in older u.s. adults
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7741486/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.773
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