Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden

Linkages between diet and other lifestyle factors may confound observational studies. We used cluster analysis to analyze how the intake of food and nutrients during pregnancy co-varies with lifestyle, clinical and demographic factors in 567 women who participated in the NICE (nutritional impact on...

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Published in:Nutrients
Main Authors: Mia Stråvik, Karin Jonsson, Olle Hartvigsson, Anna Sandin, Agnes E. Wold, Ann-Sofie Sandberg, Malin Barman
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2072-6643/11/7/1680/ 2023-08-20T04:08:46+02:00 Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden Mia Stråvik Karin Jonsson Olle Hartvigsson Anna Sandin Agnes E. Wold Ann-Sofie Sandberg Malin Barman agris 2019-07-22 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Nutrients; Volume 11; Issue 7; Pages: 1680 nutrition pregnancy micronutrients macronutrients food intake lifestyle NICE study Text 2019 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680 2023-07-31T22:27:20Z Linkages between diet and other lifestyle factors may confound observational studies. We used cluster analysis to analyze how the intake of food and nutrients during pregnancy co-varies with lifestyle, clinical and demographic factors in 567 women who participated in the NICE (nutritional impact on immunological maturation during childhood in relation to the environment) birth-cohort in northern Sweden. A food frequency questionnaire, Meal-Q, was administered in pregnancy Week 34, and the reported food and nutrient intakes were related to maternal characteristics such as age, education, rural/town residence, parity, pre-pregnancy smoking, first-trimester BMI, allergy and hyperemesis. Two lifestyle-diet clusters were identified: (1) High level of education and higher age were related to one another, and associated with a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains and fish, and (2) smoking before pregnancy and higher BMI in early pregnancy were related to one another and associated with a diet that contained white bread, French fries, pizza, meat, soft drinks, candy and snacks. More than half of the women had lower-than-recommended daily intake levels of vitamin D, folate, selenium, and iodine. Complex lifestyle-diet interactions should be considered in observational studies that link diet and pregnancy outcome. Text Northern Sweden MDPI Open Access Publishing Fries ENVELOPE(156.583,156.583,-80.950,-80.950) Nutrients 11 7 1680
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic nutrition
pregnancy
micronutrients
macronutrients
food intake
lifestyle
NICE study
spellingShingle nutrition
pregnancy
micronutrients
macronutrients
food intake
lifestyle
NICE study
Mia Stråvik
Karin Jonsson
Olle Hartvigsson
Anna Sandin
Agnes E. Wold
Ann-Sofie Sandberg
Malin Barman
Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden
topic_facet nutrition
pregnancy
micronutrients
macronutrients
food intake
lifestyle
NICE study
description Linkages between diet and other lifestyle factors may confound observational studies. We used cluster analysis to analyze how the intake of food and nutrients during pregnancy co-varies with lifestyle, clinical and demographic factors in 567 women who participated in the NICE (nutritional impact on immunological maturation during childhood in relation to the environment) birth-cohort in northern Sweden. A food frequency questionnaire, Meal-Q, was administered in pregnancy Week 34, and the reported food and nutrient intakes were related to maternal characteristics such as age, education, rural/town residence, parity, pre-pregnancy smoking, first-trimester BMI, allergy and hyperemesis. Two lifestyle-diet clusters were identified: (1) High level of education and higher age were related to one another, and associated with a diet rich in fruits, vegetables, whole grains and fish, and (2) smoking before pregnancy and higher BMI in early pregnancy were related to one another and associated with a diet that contained white bread, French fries, pizza, meat, soft drinks, candy and snacks. More than half of the women had lower-than-recommended daily intake levels of vitamin D, folate, selenium, and iodine. Complex lifestyle-diet interactions should be considered in observational studies that link diet and pregnancy outcome.
format Text
author Mia Stråvik
Karin Jonsson
Olle Hartvigsson
Anna Sandin
Agnes E. Wold
Ann-Sofie Sandberg
Malin Barman
author_facet Mia Stråvik
Karin Jonsson
Olle Hartvigsson
Anna Sandin
Agnes E. Wold
Ann-Sofie Sandberg
Malin Barman
author_sort Mia Stråvik
title Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden
title_short Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden
title_full Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden
title_fullStr Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden
title_full_unstemmed Food and Nutrient Intake during Pregnancy in Relation to Maternal Characteristics: Results from the NICE Birth Cohort in Northern Sweden
title_sort food and nutrient intake during pregnancy in relation to maternal characteristics: results from the nice birth cohort in northern sweden
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2019
url https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680
op_coverage agris
long_lat ENVELOPE(156.583,156.583,-80.950,-80.950)
geographic Fries
geographic_facet Fries
genre Northern Sweden
genre_facet Northern Sweden
op_source Nutrients; Volume 11; Issue 7; Pages: 1680
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11071680
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