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Dietary cost associated with adherence to the Mediterranean diet, and its variation by socio-economic factors in the UK Fenland Study

Authors :
Pablo Monsivais
Nicholas J. Wareham
Tyn Tong
Fumiaki Imamura
Soren Brage
Simon J. Griffin
Nita G. Forouhi
Tong, Tammy YN [0000-0002-0284-8959]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2018.

Abstract

High cost of healthy foods could be a barrier to healthy eating. We aimed to examine the association between dietary cost and adherence to the Mediterranean diet in a non-Mediterranean country. We evaluated cross-sectional data from 12 417 adults in the UK Fenland Study. Responses to 130-item FFQ were used to calculate a Mediterranean diet score (MDS). Dietary cost was estimated by matching food consumption data with retail prices of five major supermarkets. Using multivariable-adjusted linear regression, we examined the association of MDS and individual foods with dietary cost in absolute and relative scales. Subsequently, we assessed how much the association was explained by education, income, marital status and occupation, by conducting mediation analysis and testing interaction by these variables. High compared with low MDS (top to bottom third) was associated with marginally higher cost by 5·4 % (95 % CI 4·4, 6·4) or £0·20/d (95 % CI 0·16, 0·25). Participants with high adherence had higher cost associated with the healthier components (e.g. vegetables, fruits and fish), and lower cost associated with the unhealthy components (e.g. red meat, processed meat and sweets) (Pfor trendPinteraction

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d6aa637a0785bb122c2fbf3b682cf8c5
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.20295