Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort

Abstract Better adherence to dietary guidelines during pregnancy is supposed to result in healthier perinatal outcomes. We aim to characterize the diets of pregnant women by hypothesis‐driven and exploratory approaches and describe potential social determinants. Analyses included 12 048 mothers from...

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Main Authors: Manik Kadawathagedara, Namanjeet Ahluwalia, Marie‐Noelle Dufourg, Anne Forhan, Marie Aline Charles, Sandrine Lioret, Blandine deLauzon‐Guillain
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-07-01
Series:Maternal and Child Nutrition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13140
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spelling doaj-dcff8c7637d1433d989413a921a63d1a2021-06-09T15:03:41ZengWileyMaternal and Child Nutrition1740-86951740-87092021-07-01173n/an/a10.1111/mcn.13140Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohortManik Kadawathagedara0Namanjeet Ahluwalia1Marie‐Noelle Dufourg2Anne Forhan3Marie Aline Charles4Sandrine Lioret5Blandine deLauzon‐Guillain6Université de Paris, CRESS, INSERM, INRAE Paris FranceUREN, Faculty of Medicine University of Paris 13 Paris FranceINED, INSERM, Joint Unit Elfe Paris FranceUniversité de Paris, CRESS, INSERM, INRAE Paris FranceUniversité de Paris, CRESS, INSERM, INRAE Paris FranceUniversité de Paris, CRESS, INSERM, INRAE Paris FranceUniversité de Paris, CRESS, INSERM, INRAE Paris FranceAbstract Better adherence to dietary guidelines during pregnancy is supposed to result in healthier perinatal outcomes. We aim to characterize the diets of pregnant women by hypothesis‐driven and exploratory approaches and describe potential social determinants. Analyses included 12 048 mothers from the French nationwide ELFE birth cohort. Dietary intake over the last three months of the pregnancy was assessed by a food frequency questionnaire. Two hypothesis‐driven scores (the Diet Quality score, based on benchmarks derived from the National Health and Nutrition Program Guidelines, and the PANDiet score, based on nutrient intake) were calculated. Exploratory dietary patterns were also identified by principal component analysis. Multiple linear regressions were used to assess associations of maternal social characteristics with dietary patterns, accounting for the possible effect modification by their migration status. Five dietary patterns were identified: the Western, Balanced, Bread and toppings, Processed products, and Milk and breakfast cereals. Younger maternal age, single motherhood, unemployment and the presence of older children in the household were related to a suboptimal diet during pregnancy. The less acculturated the women were, the healthier and less processed their diets were, independent of their socio‐economic position. Several social determinants of the quality of women's diets were however moderated by their migration status. These findings shed light on the relations between indicators of social vulnerability, such as single motherhood and unemployment, and poorer diet quality. Given the reduced diet quality that accompanies the acculturation process, it is of paramount importance to identify the specific factors or obstacles that affect migrant women in maintaining their diet quality advantage over the majority population.https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13140acculturationbirth cohortfood frequency questionnairematernal dietmigrantpregnancy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Manik Kadawathagedara
Namanjeet Ahluwalia
Marie‐Noelle Dufourg
Anne Forhan
Marie Aline Charles
Sandrine Lioret
Blandine deLauzon‐Guillain
spellingShingle Manik Kadawathagedara
Namanjeet Ahluwalia
Marie‐Noelle Dufourg
Anne Forhan
Marie Aline Charles
Sandrine Lioret
Blandine deLauzon‐Guillain
Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort
Maternal and Child Nutrition
acculturation
birth cohort
food frequency questionnaire
maternal diet
migrant
pregnancy
author_facet Manik Kadawathagedara
Namanjeet Ahluwalia
Marie‐Noelle Dufourg
Anne Forhan
Marie Aline Charles
Sandrine Lioret
Blandine deLauzon‐Guillain
author_sort Manik Kadawathagedara
title Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort
title_short Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort
title_full Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort
title_fullStr Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort
title_full_unstemmed Diet during pregnancy: Influence of social characteristics and migration in the ELFE cohort
title_sort diet during pregnancy: influence of social characteristics and migration in the elfe cohort
publisher Wiley
series Maternal and Child Nutrition
issn 1740-8695
1740-8709
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract Better adherence to dietary guidelines during pregnancy is supposed to result in healthier perinatal outcomes. We aim to characterize the diets of pregnant women by hypothesis‐driven and exploratory approaches and describe potential social determinants. Analyses included 12 048 mothers from the French nationwide ELFE birth cohort. Dietary intake over the last three months of the pregnancy was assessed by a food frequency questionnaire. Two hypothesis‐driven scores (the Diet Quality score, based on benchmarks derived from the National Health and Nutrition Program Guidelines, and the PANDiet score, based on nutrient intake) were calculated. Exploratory dietary patterns were also identified by principal component analysis. Multiple linear regressions were used to assess associations of maternal social characteristics with dietary patterns, accounting for the possible effect modification by their migration status. Five dietary patterns were identified: the Western, Balanced, Bread and toppings, Processed products, and Milk and breakfast cereals. Younger maternal age, single motherhood, unemployment and the presence of older children in the household were related to a suboptimal diet during pregnancy. The less acculturated the women were, the healthier and less processed their diets were, independent of their socio‐economic position. Several social determinants of the quality of women's diets were however moderated by their migration status. These findings shed light on the relations between indicators of social vulnerability, such as single motherhood and unemployment, and poorer diet quality. Given the reduced diet quality that accompanies the acculturation process, it is of paramount importance to identify the specific factors or obstacles that affect migrant women in maintaining their diet quality advantage over the majority population.
topic acculturation
birth cohort
food frequency questionnaire
maternal diet
migrant
pregnancy
url https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13140
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