Home food access and children's heart healthy dietary intake at home and child care

Author:

Rasmussen Ruth A.1ORCID,Sisson Susan B.1,Campbell Janis E.2,DeGrace Beth3,Baldwin Jonathan D.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutritional Sciences, University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Oklahoma City, OK, USA

2. University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, College of Public Health, Oklahoma City, OK, USA

3. University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, College of Allied Health, Oklahoma City, OK, USA

Abstract

Background: About 12 million children under 5 years of age attend early care and education centers (ECEs). Child intake at home can be impacted by food insecurity, which is higher among low income, rural, and racially diverse families. Aim: Determine whether greater access to fruits, vegetables, and snacks at home was associated with heart-healthy diet score at home and at ECEs in preschool-age children, and to determine whether there is a difference in heart-healthy diet score between home and ECEs. Methods: Cross-sectional study involving children (3-to-5-year-old, n  =  88) who attended 16 licensed ECEs across Oklahoma. Caregivers completed the Healthy Home Survey and 3-Dinner Dietary recall to report children's home food access and home dinner dietary intake, respectively. Researchers recorded children's ECE lunch consumption using the Dietary Observation for Child Care. Heart-healthy diet score was derived from composite scores for six variables: consumption of fish, fruits, vegetables, sodium, fiber, and sugary drinks. Results: Home access to total fruits and vegetables (16.2  ±  6.3) outnumbered snacks (5.5  ±  3.0). No difference in composite heart-healthy diet score between ECEs (1.50  ±  0.8) and home (1.27  ±  0.9, P  =  0.0851). Children within neither environment met recommendations for most variables (vegetables [18–24%], fruit [6–10%], fish [5–10%], fiber [1%], sodium [22–39%]). No relationship between home food access variables and the heart-healthy diet scores at home or ECEs. Conclusion: Dietary intake of children at home and ECEs does not meet heart-healthy diet score recommendations. Interventions should support preschool aged children from families that are located rurally, low-income, racial minorities, and whose primary caregivers work outside the home.

Funder

Gretchen Swanson Center for Nutrition and the Stephenson Cancer Center at the University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center, Department of Nutritional Sciences

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,General Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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