Litcius/Paper detail

Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption Status and Its Association with Childhood Obesity among Chinese Children Aged 6–17 Years

Qian Gan, Peipei Xu, Titi Yang, Wei Cao, Juan Xu, Li Li, Hui Pan, Wen­hua Zhao, Qian Zhang

2021Nutrients35 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: There is a remarkable growth in sugar-sweetened (SSB) production and obesity prevalence among school-aged children in China. This paper describes SSB consumption and its association with obesity among Chinese children aged 6-17 years in 2012. METHODS: in total, 25,553 children aged 6~17 years enrolled in the China Nutrition and Health Surveillance 2010-2013 were included in this study. Data of SSB consumption frequency and quantity were obtained from a food frequency questionnaire, and the children's nutritional status was assessed. Multivariate logistic regression was used to evaluate the association between SSB consumption and obesity status. RESULTS: SSB intake was estimated as 181.0 g/day, occurring 2.2 times/week. Older children, males, children from urban areas, and children with higher socioeconomic status were more likely to consume SSBs. Children who consumed SSBs 1~<5 times/week (11.7%) and >5 times/week (12.9%) were more likely to be overweight/obesity than those who consumed SSBs less than once/week. CONCLUSION: SSB consumption was common among Chinese school-aged children, especially among males, older children, and children from urban areas. High consumption of SSBs was associated with a higher prevalence of overweight/obesity. Actions and plans are required to reduce SSB consumption and control childhood obesity in China.

Topics & Concepts

ObesityOverweightMedicineEnvironmental healthSocioeconomic statusChildhood obesityLogistic regressionConsumption (sociology)ChinaDemographyGerontologyPediatricsPopulationGeographyInternal medicineArchaeologySociologySocial scienceDiet, Metabolism, and DiseaseObesity, Physical Activity, DietDiet and metabolism studies
Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption Status and Its Association with Childhood Obesity among Chinese Children Aged 6–17 Years | Litcius