Influence of Food Security Status and Diet Quality on Maternal Gestational Weight Gain

Author:

Sparks Joshua R.1ORCID,Myers Candice A.1,Phelan Suzanne2,Newton Robert L.1,Yang Shengping1,Redman Leanne M.1

Affiliation:

1. Pennington Biomedical Research Center Louisiana State University Baton Rouge Louisiana

2. Kinesiology and Public Health Department California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo California

Abstract

BackgroundRecommended gestational weight gain (GWG) is crucial for health of women and their offspring. Food security status is hypothesized to influence diet quality and GWG. Therefore, we examined the relationship between diet quality and GWG by food security status.MethodsParticipants (n = 679) were enrolled in the Initial Vanguard Study of the National Children's Study. GWG was calculated as third trimester weight minus prepregnancy weight. Food security status and diet quality (Healthy Eating Index [HEI]‐2015) were assessed using the Household Food Security Survey and a Diet History Questionnaire, respectively. General linear models evaluated the relationship between GWG and HEI‐2015 by food security status.ResultsA greater proportion of women experienced food security (81.3%) compared with food insecurity (18.7%). In women with food security, GWG was negatively associated with HEI‐2015 in women having overweight (r = −0.421, P = .003) and positively associated with HEI‐2015 in women with inadequate GWG (r = 0.224, P = .019). Conversely, no significant relationships were found between GWG and HEI‐2015 in women with food insecurity.DiscussionImproved diet quality potentially lowers GWG in women with food security. However, in vulnerable populations, including women with food insecurity, improvements in diet quality may not effectively enhance GWG.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Louisiana Clinical and Translational Science Center

Publisher

Wiley

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