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Background There may be dietary differences among racial and socioeconomic groups in the United States.
Methods Using data from a representative sample of adults, we compared dietary trends among blacks and whites of varying socioeconomic status. We developed comparable measures of diet and of the consumption of macronutrients and food groups for 6061 participants in the 1965 Nationwide Food Consumption Surveys, 16,425 in the 19771978 Nationwide Food Consumption Surveys, and 9920 in the 19891991 Continuing Survey of Food Intake by In-dividuals (all conducted by the U.S. Department of Agriculture). The primary outcome was the score (range, 0 to 16) on the Diet Quality Index, a composite of eight food-and-nutrientbased recommendations from the National Academy of Sciences. A score of 4 or less was considered to indicate a relatively more healthful diet, and a value of 10 or more a relatively less healthful diet.
Results Overall dietary quality improved in all groups, from a mean Diet Quality Index score of 7.4 in 1965 to 6.4 in 19891991. In 1965, blacks of low socioeconomic status and, to a lesser extent, whites of low socioeconomic status had better diets than whites of high socioeconomic status. By the 19891991 survey, the differences among racial and socioeconomic groups had narrowed. In 1965, 9.3 percent of whites of low socioeconomic status, 16.4 percent of blacks of low socioeconomic status, and 4.7 percent of whites of high socioeconomic status had mean scores of 4 or less. In the 19891991 survey, the respective percentages were 19.9, 23.5, and 20.0. Fat consumption decreased in all groups. The consumption of fruits and vegetables varied little over time, except for an increase among blacks of medium and high socioeconomic status. The consumption of grains and legumes increased over time among whites of medium and high socioeconomic status and declined among blacks of low socioeconomic status.
Conclusions In 1965, there were large differences among groups in dietary quality, with whites of high socioeconomic status eating the least healthful diet, as measured by the index, and blacks of low socioeconomic status the most healthful. By the 19891991 survey, the diets of all groups had improved and were relatively similar.
We used data on individual diets from a representative sample of the United States population to compare dietary trends in racial and socioeconomic groups between 1965 and 19891991.
Methods
Survey Design and Sample
From over 60,000 participants in three U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) surveys, we selected the nonpregnant adults (18 years of age or older) who were either white or black and for whom dietary data were available as our final sample. Of these 32,406 subjects, 6061 were respondents to the 1965 Nationwide Food Consumption Surveys, 16,425 to the 19771978 Nationwide Food Consumption Surveys, and 9920 to the 19891991 Continuing Survey of Food Intake by Individuals. These USDA surveys are administered to stratified probability samples of households of the noninstitutionalized population in the 48 conterminous states. The 19771978 and 19891991 surveys were both conducted in four waves (winter, spring, summer, and fall), each of which surveyed a different sample.11,12,13 The 1965 survey gathered data on individual diets in a single sample in the spring.14 These surveys were multistage, stratified samples of the U.S. population in defined geographic areas. For each survey, response rates differed among the surveyed subgroups. Thus, weights, derived from the response rate for each subgroup, could be used to permit inferences applicable to the total noninstitutionalized U.S. population.11,12,14
Categories of socioeconomic status were based on education and income. Respondents with over 12 completed years of education and an income that was more than 350 percent of poverty level were categorized as having high socioeconomic status; respondents with less than a high-school education and an income less than 185 percent of poverty level were categorized as having low socioeconomic status. Estimates of variance in the study are frequently larger for blacks because of their smaller number in each of the three surveys. Of note is the disproportionately small number of blacks of high socioeconomic status.
Dietary Data
In each survey, interviewers asked respondents, in the respondents' homes, to recall their diet over a one-day period (a one-day dietary recall). Information was collected on everything the respondents ate inside or outside the home. The 19771978 and 19891991 surveys also included two self-administered one-day food records. To avoid biasing the results because of different methods of data collection, we used only the information from the interviewer-administered record of dietary intake in each survey.
The 1994 USDA Nutrient Database was used to calculate the nutrient value of the food intake. A linking program was used to assign the same food code to comparable items in each period. Values from the 1994 Nutrient Database were then applied to the three data sets to provide consistent estimates of nutrient composition over time. The use of a nutrient data base developed in the 1990s to assign macronutrient values to food consumed in earlier periods should not artificially create significant differences in measurements of food energy and fat content.15,16
Food Grouping
In order to examine changes in the quantity of foods consumed over time, we developed dietary measures, including measures of macronutrients and of food groups, that could be applied to the data from all three surveys. The food-grouping system disaggregates the major USDA food groups into 56 more distinct nutrient-based groups, according to fat and dietary-fiber composition; these groups included all the foods that respondents reported eating.8,10 (A copy of the food-grouping system is available from the authors.)
Diet Quality Index
The primary measure we selected to illustrate the observed trends was the Diet Quality Index, a composite of eight recommendations regarding the consumption of foods and nutrients from the National Academy of Sciences (Table 1).17 This index reflects the risk gradient associated with diet for major diet-related chronic diseases. Respondents who met a given dietary goal received a score of 0; those whose consumption fell within approximately 30 percent of the goal were given a score of 1; and those whose consumption differed by more than 30 percent from the goal were given a score of 2. The scores for all eight dietary goals were totaled, so that the index ranged from 0 to 16 (the lower the score, the better the diet). Details of the index's rationale, construction, and validity appear elsewhere.18,19 For the purposes of our analysis, a Diet Quality Index score of 4 or less was considered to represent a relatively more healthful diet, and a value of 10 or more a relatively less healthful diet; respondents with a Diet Quality Index score of 4 or less by definition met at least four of the eight dietary recommendations.17
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Results
Overall, dietary quality improved between 1965 and 19891991. The mean (±SE) Diet Quality Index score changed from 7.4±0.02 to 6.4±0.01. This improvement was seen in all racial and socioeconomic groups (Table 2). Differences in the mean Diet Quality Index score according to race and socioeconomic status have narrowed. Within the groups of low and medium socioeconomic status, the proportion of blacks with Diet Quality Index scores of 4 or less exceeded that of whites in each period. In 1965 and 19771978, the proportion of people with a Diet Quality Index score of 4 or less was lower in the groups of high socioeconomic status than in the groups of lower status. Notably, the upward shift in the percentage of people with a score of 4 or less was greater among whites than blacks for low- and high-socioeconomic-status groups.
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Examination of the components of the Diet Quality Index reveals that by 19891991 the proportion of energy derived from fat dropped from nearly 40 percent in some groups to less than 35 percent for both races in all socioeconomic groups (Table 3). Blacks reported a marginally lower percentage of energy derived from saturated fat than whites in all periods, and by 19891991 the mean among blacks of high socioeconomic status approached the Diet Quality Index's target of 10 percent. The consumption of dietary cholesterol declined in all groups over time. The consumption of fruits and vegetables varied little over time, except that blacks of medium and high socioeconomic status increased their mean number of servings of these foods by one, to approach or meet the recommended five servings a day. In 1965, the consumption of grains and legumes was near the recommended level of six or more servings daily among blacks of low socioeconomic status. However, the mean number of servings in this group declined over time, from 5.5 in 1965 to 4.5 in 19891991. The consumption of grains and legumes, however, increased over time among whites of medium and high socioeconomic status, from, for example, 3.7 servings a day for whites of high socioeconomic status in 1965 to 4.7 in 19891991. Excessive consumption of protein and sodium declined over time; declines in the intake of protein were greatest among blacks of medium socioeconomic status and whites of high socioeconomic status, and declines in sodium consumption were greatest among blacks of low socioeconomic status. The differences in calcium intake related to race widened over time, with whites consuming more than blacks and groups of higher socioeconomic status consuming more than those of lower socioeconomic status.
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Discussion
In general, the dietary patterns we examined with the Diet Quality Index suggest two main trends. First, the differences among racial and socioeconomic groups have narrowed over time. The overall improvement in mean Diet Quality Index scores over time reflects changing consumption patterns and increasing acceptance of dietary recommendations. The fat-related components of the index (consumption of cholesterol and of total and saturated fat) and protein intake follow this pattern; however, the mean number of servings of fruits and vegetables and the consumption of grains either have remained constant or have decreased in some groups, such as whites and blacks of low socioeconomic status. Changes related to food groups are more complex to interpret but generally show that whites of high socioeconomic status reduced their consumption of items in high-fat food groups and conformed to other dietary guidelines to a greater extent than did either whites or blacks of medium and low socioeconomic status.
Second, improvements in diet were more likely to occur in the groups of high socioeconomic status. With so few high-income blacks surveyed in 1965, we cannot describe trends in this group as clearly as we can in other groups, but our results suggest that this subgroup is more similar to whites of high socioeconomic status than to blacks of low socioeconomic status. In summary, although in 1965 there were large differences in dietary quality, with whites of high socioeconomic status eating the worst diets, as measured by the Dietary Quality Index, and blacks of low socioeconomic status the best, by 19891991, the diets of all groups were relatively similar.
Supported in part by a grant from the Kellogg Corporation.
We are indebted to Dr. Victor Fulgoni, Dr. Leila Saldanha, and Dr. Janet Tietyen of Kellogg, to Phil Bardsley and Kelly Gallagher for programming support, to Terri Carson for work in developing the food-group measures, to Lynn Igoe for editorial assistance, and to Frances Dancy for administrative support.
Source Information
From the Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
Address reprint requests to Dr. Popkin at the Carolina Population Center, CB 8120 University Square, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27516-3997.
References
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Dietary Trends in the United States
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