Social Inequalities in Changes in Diet in Adolescents during Confinement Due to COVID-19 in Spain: The DESKcohort Project
Author
Other authors
Publication date
2021ISSN
2072-6643
Abstract
Adolescence is a critical period in the consolidation of healthy lifestyles that can last into
adulthood. To analyze changes in food consumption and eating behaviors in high-school adolescents
during the first confinement, a cross-sectional study was conducted at the end of confinement in Spain.
Changes in the frequency or quantity of consumption of different types of food and food-related
behaviors were analyzed. Socioeconomic and health-related variables were also considered. To
determine whether dietary changes were related to socioeconomic position (SEP), Poisson regression
models with robust variance were estimated. Overall, there were some changes towards a healthier
diet such as an increase in fruit consumption (38.9%) and a decrease in the consumption of soft drinks
(49.8%), sweets and pastries (39.3%), and convenience foods (49.2%). Some changes, however, were
related to less healthy behaviors, such as a more irregular pattern of meal distribution (39.9%) or an
increase in snacking between meals (56.4%). Changes towards less healthy eating were also related
to students’ SEP. The risk of worsening the diet was found to be 21% higher in adolescents from a
more disadvantaged SEP. Future public policies could be adapted to avoid increasing nutritional and
health inequalities.
Document Type
Article
Document version
Published version
Language
English
Subject (CDU)
613 - Hygiene generally. Personal health and hygiene
Pages
15 p.
Publisher
MDPI
Citation
Aguilar-Martínez, A.; Bosque-Prous, M.; González-Casals, H.; Colillas-Malet, E.; Puigcorbé, S.; Esquius, L.; Espelt, A. (2021). Social Inequalities in Changes in Diet in Adolescents during Confinement Due to COVID-19 in Spain: The DESKcohort Project. Nutrients, 13, 1577. https://doi.org/10.3390/ nu13051577
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- Articles [1523]
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