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Television habits in relation to overweight, diet and taste preferences in European children: the IDEFICS study
Authors:Lauren Lissner  Anne Lanfer  Wencke Gwozdz  Steingerdur Olafsdottir  Gabriele Eiben  Luis A. Moreno  Alba M. Santaliestra-Pasías  éva Kovács  Gianvincenzo Barba  Helle-Mai Loit  Yiannis Kourides  Valeria Pala  Hermann Pohlabeln  Stefaan De Henauw  Kirsten Buchecker  Wolfgang Ahrens  Lucia Reisch
Affiliation:1. Public Health Epidemiology Unit, Department of Community Medicine and Public Health, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Box 454, 405 30, Gothenburg, Sweden
2. BIPS - Institute for Epidemiology and Prevention Research, Bremen, Germany
3. Copenhagen Business School, Copenhagen, Denmark
4. Department of Food and Nutrition, and Sport Science, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden
5. GENUD (Growth, Exercise, Nutrition and Development) Research Group, School of Health Sciences, University of Zaragoza, Zaragoza, Spain
6. University of Pécs, Pécs, Hungary
7. Epidemiology & Population Genetics, Institute of Food Sciences, CNR, Avellino, Italy
8. National Institute for Health Development, Tallinn, Estonia
9. Research and Education Institute of Child Health, Strovolos, Cyprus
10. Epidemiology and Prevention Unit, Department of Preventive & Predictive Medicine, Fondazione IRCCS Istituto Nazionale dei Tumori, Milan, Italy
11. Department of Public Health, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium
12. Department of Food Science, TTZ, Bremerhaven, Germany
Abstract:
Early television exposure has been associated with various health outcomes including childhood obesity. This paper describes associations between patterns of television viewing, on one hand, and diet, taste preference and weight status, on the other, in European preschoolers and schoolchildren. The IDEFICS baseline survey was conducted at examination centers in Italy, Estonia, Cyprus, Belgium, Sweden, Germany, Hungary, and Spain. 15,144 children aged 2–9 completed the basic protocol, including anthropometry and parental questionnaires on their diets and television habits. A subsample of 1,696 schoolchildren underwent further sensory testing for fat and sweet taste preferences. Three dichotomous indicators described: children’s habitual television exposure time; television viewing during meals; and having televisions in their bedrooms. Based on these variables we investigated television habits in relation to overweight (IOTF) and usual consumption of foods high in fat and sugar. A possible role of taste preference in the latter association was tested in the sensory subgroup. All television indicators were significantly associated with increased risk of overweight, with odds ratios ranging from 1.21 to 1.30, in fully adjusted models. Children’s propensities to consume high-fat and high-sugar foods were positively and, in most analyses, monotonically associated with high-risk television behaviors. The associations between television and diet propensities were not explained by preference for added fat or sugar in test foods. To summarize, in addition to being more overweight, children with high-risk television behaviors may, independent of objectively measured taste preferences for fat and sugar, passively overconsume higher-fat and particularly higher-sugar diets.
Keywords:
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