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Journal ArticleDOI

Baseline determinants of global diet quality in older men and women from the NuAge cohort

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TLDR
These results point to several key factors influencing global DQ in older adults and also show gender-based differences, which need to be understood to ensure good diet quality as people age.
Abstract
Judicious food choices are of prime importance during aging. This study was conducted to identify individual and collective attributes determining global diet quality (DQ). Participants were 1,793 adults (52% women) from the NuAge study on nutrition and successful aging. Subjects aged 67 to 84 years in relatively good health were recruited from the Quebec Medicare Database. Sociodemographic, affective, and cognitive data, health conditions, perceived physical health and functional status, dietary habits and dietary attributes and community resources were obtained using questionnaires. Body weight and height were measured and body mass index (BMI) was calculated. Three non-consecutive 24-hour diet recalls were collected at recruitment. DQ, assessed using the Canadian Healthy Eating Index (C-HEI, /100), was computed on the mean intakes from the diet recalls. Analyses were stratified by gender. Variables significantly related to DQ in bivariate analyses (p<.05) were entered into backward stepwise multiple regression analyses. Among men, the final model showed higher education (β=0.23, p=.01), diet knowledge (β=0.96, p<.0001), number of daily meals (β=1.91, p=.02) and perceived physical health (β=0.06, p=.01) to be positive determinants of DQ, whereas alcohol consumption (β=−2.25, p=.05), wearing dentures (β=−2.31, p=.01) and eating regularly in restaurants (β=− 1.65, p=.03) were negative determinants of DQ (adjusted R2 = 13.7%). Among women, higher education (β=0.29, p=.002), diet knowledge (β=0.54, p=.002), number of daily meals (β=3.61, p<.0001), and hunger (β=0.61, p<.0001) were positive determinants of global DQ; greater BMI (β=−0.16, p=.03) and chewing problems (β=−0.48, p=.03) were negative determinants of DQ (adjusted R2 = 7.8%). These results point to several key factors influencing global DQ in older adults and also show gender-based differences. More research must be done to better understand how these factors change with aging and exert their impact on diet, particularly since variance in DQ was largely unexplained. As diet knowledge was an independent predictor for both genders, targeted, sustainable interventions are needed to ensure good diet quality as people age.

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Citations
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Understanding meal patterns: definitions, methodology and impact on nutrient intake and diet quality

TL;DR: An understanding of the influence of different meal definitions on the characterisation of meal patterns will facilitate the interpretation of the existing literature, and may provide guidance on the most appropriate definitions to use.
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Factors influencing food choice for independently living older people - a systematic literature review

TL;DR: A systematic review of the literature consistent with PRISMA guidelines was performed to identify articles investigating influences on food choice among older people and suggest the need for further investigations involving larger, more demographically diverse samples of participants.
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Improving nutrition to support healthy ageing: what are the opportunities for intervention?

TL;DR: There is a need for wider recognition of malnutrition risk among older adults, including implementation of routine screening of nutritional status and early diagnosis, and for opportunities to intervene earlier in the lifecourse.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ten-year patterns of alcohol consumption and drinking problems among older women and men.

TL;DR: Older women and men show comparable declines in alcohol consumption and drinking problems, and specific late-life social context and coping variables, and life history indices, are risk factors for late- life drinking problems among both women andMen.
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Changes in eating behavior during the aging process.

TL;DR: The changing demographics of the world population necessitate a review of normative eating behavior in order to better differentiate eating pathologies from age-associated changes.
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Duke University Center for the Study of Aging and Human Development

TL;DR: Concerns The Center has with the difficulty of maintaining interdisciplinary balance in gerontology and geriatrics; the importance of recruiting the "best and the brightest" as future scientists and clinicians in aging; and the need to improve the translation of research results into practice are reflected.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of fruit and vegetable consumption and the influence of sex, age and socio-demographic factors among Canadian elderly.

TL;DR: Gender and several socio-demographic factors significantly influence f&v intake in Canadian elderly and further studies warrant identifying at risk elderly groups and implementing programs to encourage adequate f&V intake by Canadian elderly.
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