Cargando…

Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I

The quality of diet can be measured using diet quality indices, based on knowledge of associations between diet and health. The objective of this work was to evaluate whether the International Diet Quality Index is suitable for use as a diet quality index in populations of Mexican university girls....

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Espino-Rosales, Diana, Lopez-Moro, Alejandro, Heras-González, Leticia, Jimenez-Casquet, Maria Jose, Olea-Serrano, Fatima, Mariscal-Arcas, Miguel
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9818935/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36611598
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010138
_version_ 1784865107686195200
author Espino-Rosales, Diana
Lopez-Moro, Alejandro
Heras-González, Leticia
Jimenez-Casquet, Maria Jose
Olea-Serrano, Fatima
Mariscal-Arcas, Miguel
author_facet Espino-Rosales, Diana
Lopez-Moro, Alejandro
Heras-González, Leticia
Jimenez-Casquet, Maria Jose
Olea-Serrano, Fatima
Mariscal-Arcas, Miguel
author_sort Espino-Rosales, Diana
collection PubMed
description The quality of diet can be measured using diet quality indices, based on knowledge of associations between diet and health. The objective of this work was to evaluate whether the International Diet Quality Index is suitable for use as a diet quality index in populations of Mexican university girls. A cross-sectional nutritional survey was conducted at the University of Chihuahua (Mexico), collecting semi-quantitative nutritional information and socio-economic and lifestyle data from a representative sample of 400 women. Mean (Standard Deviation (SD)) age was 21.43 years (SD: 3.72); 59.1% were normal weight, 26.6% overweight, 15.3% obesity. The Diet Quality Index-International (DQI-I) was developed according to the method of Kim et al. (2003) and focused on major aspects of a high-quality diet (variety, adequacy, moderation and overall balance). The total score of Diet Quality Index-International reached 53.86% (SD: 11.43), indicating that the general diet of Mexican women a poor-quality diet. Adequacy scored highest, followed by moderation and variety. Overall balance scored the lowest. Variety: 26.3 % consumed less than 4 food groups daily, only 12.8% take more than 1 serving from each food group, and 50.6% consumed only one source of protein daily. Regarding adequacy, a large proportion of the population reported an intake of proteins, vitamin C, calcium, iron, and fruit greater than 50% of recommendation; the vegetables, fiber and grain groups were less 50%. Poor scores were obtained for total fat and SFA consumption (moderation). No statistically significant differences are observed for any of the variables under study and score of the Diet Quality Index-International: body mass index, weight, physical activity level, education level of father and mother, location of lunch, breakfast considered important, knowledge of nutrition, which allows us to consider a relatively uniform population in its eating habits. These people are close to a Westernized diet, and an intervention in nutritional education would be advisable to improve the intake of unprocessed foods, consume a greater variety of protein sources and significantly reduce consumption of sugary foods and soft drinks. Due to different methodological and cultural factors, the proposed Diet Quality Index-International dietary assessment method does not seem to be useful in the assessment of diet quality in the Mexican university population, so further research is needed to develop a diet quality index adapted to the Mexican population.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9818935
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-98189352023-01-07 Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I Espino-Rosales, Diana Lopez-Moro, Alejandro Heras-González, Leticia Jimenez-Casquet, Maria Jose Olea-Serrano, Fatima Mariscal-Arcas, Miguel Healthcare (Basel) Article The quality of diet can be measured using diet quality indices, based on knowledge of associations between diet and health. The objective of this work was to evaluate whether the International Diet Quality Index is suitable for use as a diet quality index in populations of Mexican university girls. A cross-sectional nutritional survey was conducted at the University of Chihuahua (Mexico), collecting semi-quantitative nutritional information and socio-economic and lifestyle data from a representative sample of 400 women. Mean (Standard Deviation (SD)) age was 21.43 years (SD: 3.72); 59.1% were normal weight, 26.6% overweight, 15.3% obesity. The Diet Quality Index-International (DQI-I) was developed according to the method of Kim et al. (2003) and focused on major aspects of a high-quality diet (variety, adequacy, moderation and overall balance). The total score of Diet Quality Index-International reached 53.86% (SD: 11.43), indicating that the general diet of Mexican women a poor-quality diet. Adequacy scored highest, followed by moderation and variety. Overall balance scored the lowest. Variety: 26.3 % consumed less than 4 food groups daily, only 12.8% take more than 1 serving from each food group, and 50.6% consumed only one source of protein daily. Regarding adequacy, a large proportion of the population reported an intake of proteins, vitamin C, calcium, iron, and fruit greater than 50% of recommendation; the vegetables, fiber and grain groups were less 50%. Poor scores were obtained for total fat and SFA consumption (moderation). No statistically significant differences are observed for any of the variables under study and score of the Diet Quality Index-International: body mass index, weight, physical activity level, education level of father and mother, location of lunch, breakfast considered important, knowledge of nutrition, which allows us to consider a relatively uniform population in its eating habits. These people are close to a Westernized diet, and an intervention in nutritional education would be advisable to improve the intake of unprocessed foods, consume a greater variety of protein sources and significantly reduce consumption of sugary foods and soft drinks. Due to different methodological and cultural factors, the proposed Diet Quality Index-International dietary assessment method does not seem to be useful in the assessment of diet quality in the Mexican university population, so further research is needed to develop a diet quality index adapted to the Mexican population. MDPI 2023-01-01 /pmc/articles/PMC9818935/ /pubmed/36611598 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010138 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Espino-Rosales, Diana
Lopez-Moro, Alejandro
Heras-González, Leticia
Jimenez-Casquet, Maria Jose
Olea-Serrano, Fatima
Mariscal-Arcas, Miguel
Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I
title Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I
title_full Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I
title_fullStr Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I
title_full_unstemmed Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I
title_short Estimation of the Quality of the Diet of Mexican University Students Using DQI-I
title_sort estimation of the quality of the diet of mexican university students using dqi-i
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9818935/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36611598
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11010138
work_keys_str_mv AT espinorosalesdiana estimationofthequalityofthedietofmexicanuniversitystudentsusingdqii
AT lopezmoroalejandro estimationofthequalityofthedietofmexicanuniversitystudentsusingdqii
AT herasgonzalezleticia estimationofthequalityofthedietofmexicanuniversitystudentsusingdqii
AT jimenezcasquetmariajose estimationofthequalityofthedietofmexicanuniversitystudentsusingdqii
AT oleaserranofatima estimationofthequalityofthedietofmexicanuniversitystudentsusingdqii
AT mariscalarcasmiguel estimationofthequalityofthedietofmexicanuniversitystudentsusingdqii