4.7 Article

The Influence of Sociodemographic Factors, Lifestyle, and Risk Perception on Dietary Patterns in Pregnant Women Living in Highly Contaminated Areas: Data from the NEHO Birth Cohort

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14173489

Keywords

dietary patterns; pregnancy; principal component analysis; socioeconomic factors; lifestyle; public health

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, Universities and Research (MIUR)

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During pregnancy, maternal nutrition and lifestyle have a crucial impact on fetal development and newborn health outcomes. This study investigates the factors influencing dietary patterns in pregnant women living in highly contaminated areas and explores whether women with higher environmental risk perception exhibit different nutrition behaviors during pregnancy.
During pregnancy, maternal nutrition and lifestyle play a critical role in influencing fetal development and newborn health outcomes. The aim of this study is to investigate the factors influencing the adherence to dietary patterns in pregnant women living in highly contaminated areas, and whether women with higher environmental risk perception manifest different nutritional behaviors during pregnancy. Food consumption data on 816 pregnant women from the Neonatal Environment and Health Outcomes (NEHO) residential birth cohort were analyzed. Dietary patterns were computed by principal component analysis. A multinomial logistic regression was also applied to identify sociodemographic, lifestyle, and pregnancy-related determinants of adherence to dietary patterns during pregnancy. Three patterns of food consumption-explaining 24.9% of the total variance-were identified as prudent, high energy, and vegetarian patterns. Results suggest that food choices during pregnancy follow a social gradient and align with other health behaviors during pregnancy: older, better educated, and physically active women with higher risk perception are more likely to follow healthier dietary patterns. Knowledge about what is eaten can contribute to dietary choices. Interventions to improve the prenatal nutrition knowledge of pregnant women are needed, especially concerning younger mothers and those with lower educational levels.

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