4.7 Article

Dietary Patterns in Pregnancy in New Zealand-Influence of Maternal Socio-Demographic, Health and Lifestyle Factors

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu8050300

Keywords

dietary patterns; pregnancy; principal component analysis; ethnicity

Funding

  1. New Zealand Ministry of Social Development
  2. New Zealand Ministry of Health
  3. New Zealand Ministry of Education
  4. New Zealand Ministry of Justice
  5. New Zealand Ministry of Pacific Island Affairs
  6. Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment
  7. Ministry for Women
  8. Social Policy Evaluation and Research Unit
  9. Te Puni Kokiri
  10. New Zealand Police
  11. Sport New Zealand
  12. Housing New Zealand Corporation
  13. Mental Health Commission
  14. University of Auckland
  15. Auckland UniServices Limited
  16. NZ Health Research Council
  17. Statistics New Zealand
  18. Office of the Children's Commissioner
  19. Office of Ethnic Affairs

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Exploration of dietary pattern associations within a multi-ethnic society context has been limited. We aimed to describe dietary patterns of 5664 pregnant women from the Growing Up in New Zealand study, and investigate associations between these patterns and maternal socio-demographic, place of birth, health and lifestyle factors. Participants completed a food frequency questionnaire prior to the birth of their child. Principal components analysis was used to extract dietary patterns and multivariable analyses used to determine associations. Four dietary components were extracted. Higher scores on, 'Junk' and 'Traditional/White bread', were associated with decreasing age, lower educational levels, being of Pacific or Maori ethnicity and smoking. Higher scores on, 'Health conscious' and 'Fusion/Protein', were associated with increasing age, better self-rated health, lower pre-pregnancy body mass index (BMI) and not smoking. Higher scores on 'Junk' and 'Health conscious' were associated with being born in New Zealand (NZ), whereas higher scores on 'Fusion/Protein' was associated with being born outside NZ and being of non-European ethnicity, particularly Asian. High scores on the 'Health conscious' dietary pattern showed the highest odds of adherence to the pregnancy dietary guidelines. In this cohort of pregnant women different dietary patterns were associated with migration, ethnicity, socio-demographic characteristics, health behaviors and adherence to dietary guidelines.

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