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Abstract

Objectives : The goal of this research was to assess the roles of demographic and home food environment characteristics on diet quality measured with the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Healthy Eating Index (HEI) in a population of low-income overweight and obese African American women. Design : Cross-sectional analysis of baseline data. Setting : A community-based study of low-income overweight and obese African American women. Subjects : Participants enrolled in the Healthy Homes/Healthy Families study including a home environment survey (e.g., food availability, food practices and social support) and 24-hour recall dietary data collected on one weekday and one weekend day (n = 198). Results : In multivariate regression analyses, demographic characteristics were not significantly associated with diet quality; however, several home food environment characteristics were significantly associated with higher quality diets, including healthy shopping (e.g., regularly purchasing fresh fruits and vegetables), selecting healthy beverages (e.g., without added sugar), healthy food preparation, and serving behaviors. Eating while watching television was associated with lower quality diets. Nearly 33% (p < 0.001) of the variance in HEI total score was explained by the home food environment factors, far surpassing that explained by demographic characteristics (3.5%, p = 0.21). Conclusions : Interventions targeting the home food environment may improve overall diet quality in low-income overweight African American populations.

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1007418
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Supplemental data
Journal of the American College of Nutrition. 2015 Sept. 3, v. 34, no. 5 p.416-424 Routledge
Title
Dietary and Behavioral Factors Associated with Diet Quality among Low-income Overweight and Obese African American Women
Correspondence author
Volume
34
Issue
5 p.416-424
Pages
p. 416-424
Number of pages
9
Publication year
2015
Publisher
Routledge
ISSN
1541-1087
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Peer reviewed
Yes
Format availability
Available from publisher's site
Language of publication
English
Document type
Journal Article
Holding library
DNAL
Accession number
IND604087560
ProQuest document ID
2000263180
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/dietary-behavioral-factors-associated-with-diet/docview/2000263180/se-2?accountid=208611
Last updated
2025-05-05
Database
ProQuest One Academic