The Influence of Socioeconomic Status on Snacking and Weight among Adolescents: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Identifying the Research Questions
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.3. Search Strategies and Information Sources
2.4. Study Screening, Study Selection, and Data Extraction
3. Results
3.1. Low Socioeconomic Status and Higher Snacking
3.2. High Socioeconomic Status’ Variable Effect on Snack Consumption
3.3. Sex Differences in Socioeconomic Status and Snack Consumption
3.4. Weight-Related Outcomes Related to Snacking and SES
4. Discussion
4.1. Primary Aims: Relationship between SES and Snacking
4.2. Secondary Aims: Weight-Related Outcomes
4.3. Limitations
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
5.1. Conclusions
5.2. Recommendations for Research
5.3. Recommendations for Practice
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
PubMed Search Strategy, Searched on 28 May 2019 | |
---|---|
Set Number | Search Terms |
1 | (“Socioeconomic Factors”[Mesh] OR socioeconomic*[tiab] OR “SES”[tiab] OR “social economic”[tiab] OR “social economics”[tiab] OR “social economical”[tiab] OR “social economically”[tiab] OR “social stratification”[tiab] OR “social class”[tiab] OR “social classes”[tiab] OR “social stratum”[tiab] OR “social stratifications”[tiab] OR “social strata”[tiab] OR “social status”[tiab] OR “social statuses”[tiab] OR “SSS”[tiab] OR “social factors”[tiab] OR “economic factors”[tiab] OR “middle class”[tiab] OR “middle classes”[tiab] OR “lower class”[tiab] OR “lower classes”[tiab] OR “working class”[tiab] OR “working classes”[tiab] OR “upper class”[tiab] OR “upper classes”[tiab] OR “social caste”[tiab] OR “social castes”[tiab] OR “standard of living”[tiab] OR “living standard”[tiab] OR “living standards”[tiab] OR “upper income”[tiab] OR “upper incomes”[tiab] OR “high income”[tiab] OR “high incomes”[tiab] OR “low income”[tiab] OR “low incomes”[tiab] OR “income level”[tiab] OR “income levels”[tiab] OR “higher income”[tiab] OR “higher incomes”[tiab] OR “lower income”[tiab] OR “lower incomes”[tiab] OR “social inequality”[tiab] OR “social inequalities”[tiab] OR “social equity”[tiab] OR “economic class”[tiab] OR “economic classes”[tiab] OR “economic stratum”[tiab] OR “economic stratification”[tiab] OR “economic strata”[tiab] OR “economic status”[tiab] OR “economic statuses”[tiab] OR “economic inequality”[tiab] OR “economic inequalities”[tiab] OR “social condition”[tiab] OR “social conditions”[tiab] OR “living condition”[tiab] OR “living conditions”[tiab] OR “social mobility”[tiab] OR “social mobilities”[tiab] OR “household income”[tiab] OR “household incomes”[tiab] OR “household wealth”[tiab] OR “inherited wealth”[tiab] OR “home ownership”[tiab] OR “property ownership”[tiab] OR poverty[tiab] OR indigen*[tiab] OR homeless*[tiab] OR “economic deprivation”[tiab] OR “economically deprived”[tiab] OR “social deprivation”[tiab] OR “financial strain”[tiab] OR “financial strains”[tiab] OR “debt level”[tiab] OR “debt levels”[tiab] OR “level of debt”[tiab] OR “income gap”[tiab] OR “income gaps”[tiab] OR unemployed[tiab] OR underemployed[tiab] OR “economically disadvantaged”[tiab] OR “socially disadvantaged“[tiab] OR “economically secure”[tiab] OR “economic security”[tiab] OR “material wealth”[tiab] OR underprivileg*[tiab]) |
2 | ((literate[tiab] OR literacy[tiab] OR illitera*[tiab] OR “education level”[tiab] OR “educational level”[tiab] OR “education levels”[tiab] OR “educational levels”[tiab] OR “educational status”[tiab] OR “education status”[tiab] OR “level of education”[tiab] OR “educational attainment”[tiab] OR “education background”[tiab] OR “education backgrounds”[tiab] OR “educational background”[tiab] OR “educational backgrounds”[tiab] OR graduate*[tiab] OR “educational achievement”[tiab] OR “educational achievements”[tiab] OR “academic achievement”[tiab] OR “academic achievements”[tiab] OR “academic attainment”[tiab] OR “educationally disadvantaged”[tiab] OR “educational stratification”[tiab] OR “achievement gap”[tiab] OR “achievement gaps”[tiab] OR schooling[tiab] OR “school years complete”[tiab] OR “school years completed”[tiab]) AND (parent*[tiab] OR family[tiab] OR families[tiab] OR mother[tiab] OR mothers[tiab] OR father[tiab] OR fathers[tiab] OR mum[tiab] OR mums[tiab] OR dad[tiab] OR dads[tiab] OR mom[tiab] OR moms[tiab] OR paternal[tiab] OR maternal[tiab] OR birthparent*[tiab] OR birthmother*[tiab] OR birthfather*[tiab])) |
3 | #1 OR #2 |
4 | (“Adolescent”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Nutritional Physiological Phenomena”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Development”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Health”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Health Services”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Behavior”[Mesh:NoExp] OR “Adolescent Medicine”[Mesh] OR “Adolescent Psychiatry”[Mesh] OR “Psychology, Adolescent”[Mesh] OR adolescen*[tiab] OR teen*[tiab] OR youth[tiab] OR youths[tiab] OR youngster*[tiab] OR juvenile*[tiab] OR pubescent[tiab]) |
5 | (“Snacks”[Mesh] OR snack*[tiab] OR “intake between meals”[tiab] OR “consumption between meals”[tiab] OR “eating between meals”[tiab] OR “eat between meals”[tiab] OR “eats between meals”[tiab] OR “food between meals”[tiab]) |
6 | (“Body Weight”[Mesh:NoExp] OR “Ideal Body Weight”[Mesh] OR “Body Weight Changes”[Mesh] OR “Overweight”[Mesh] OR “Thinness”[Mesh] OR “Body Weight Maintenance”[Mesh] OR “Body Mass Index”[Mesh] OR “Body Fat Distribution”[Mesh] OR weight[tiab] OR weights[tiab] OR “body mass index”[tiab] OR “BMI”[tiab] OR “BMIs”[tiab] OR “BMIZ”[tiab] OR “body fat”[tiab] OR “body fatness”[tiab] OR obese[tiab] OR obesity[tiab] OR overweight[tiab] OR thinness[tiab] OR emaciation[tiab] OR emaciated[tiab] OR “excess fat”[tiab] OR “excess fats”[tiab] OR adiposity[tiab] OR “BAI”[tiab] OR underweight[tiab] OR “quetelet index”[tiab] OR “lean mass”[tiab] OR “fat mass”[tiab]) |
7 | #3 AND #4 AND #5 AND #6 |
8 | #7, Filters: English, Portuguese, Spanish; Publication date from 2000/01/01 |
Appendix B
a. Author(s) |
b. Year of publication |
c. Origin/country of origin (where the study was published or conducted) |
d. Aims/purpose |
e. Study population and sample size (if applicable) |
f. Methods (qualitative, quantitative, or mixed) |
g. Results for primary aim |
h. Results for secondary aim |
i. Implications of results for the purpose of this scoping review |
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Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
1. Must include information regarding socioeconomic status (SES) (including education and/or income) and snacking; weight-related outcomes are secondary | 1. Language other than English, Portuguese, or Spanish |
2. Snacking behavior was assessed | 2. Publication year before 2000 |
3. Mean or median age of participants must fall within 13–17. If the mean and median are both presented, the median is used as the determining vote | 3. Mean or median age of participants falls outside of 13–17 |
4. The primary population (defined as more than half of the study participants) includes adolescents with a significant medical diagnosis, such as disordered eating, substance use or abuse, cancer, cardiovascular disease, diabetes, ADHD, autism, or any other disease state for which they are administered medication that is known to affect eating behavior, weight, or body composition | |
5. Opinion paper, editorial, or policy and legislation literature | |
6. Does not assess or discuss the relationship between SES and snacking | |
7. If the variable for snacking is not snack consumption (e.g., snack preference, snack choice, but no evidence of consumption) |
Study Authors (Year); Country | Sample Size (n) | Age Range (years); Mean or Median (Years) | Study Design; Duration | Setting |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grenard et al. (2013) [40]; US | 158 | Range = 14–17; mean age = 15.98 | Cross-sectional study; 7 days | Various participant locations in the US |
Hardy et al. (2012) [36]; Australia | 1568 | No age range reported; 8th grade mean age = 13.6; 10th grade mean age = 15.6; overall mean age = 13.74 | Cross-sectional study; 4 months | Primary and secondary schools in New South Wales, Australia |
Larson et al. (2015) [37]; US | 2598 (1999); 2540 (2010) | No age range reported; mean age = 14.62 (1999) and 14.52 (2010) | Repeated, cross-sectional study; two separate academic years (1999 and 2010) | Selected health, physical education, and science classes in secondary schools located in Minneapolis-St. Paul, MN, US |
Maruapula et al. (2011) [38]; Botswana | 704 | No age range reported; mean age = 14.9 | Nationwide, cross-sectional study | Secondary schools in Botswana, Africa |
Pérez et al. (2013) [41]; Spain | 1620 | Range = 3–16 (subsample range = 13–16); no mean age reported | Cross-sectional study; one-time visit | Schools in Cádiz, Spain |
Schumacher et al. (2014) [42]; Australia | 332 | Range = 13.4–13.9; mean age = 13.7 | Secondary analysis of Nutrition and Enjoyable Activity for Teen Girls (NEAT Girls) Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT); 12 months | Governmental, low-income secondary schools in the Hunter and Central Coast regions of New South Wales, Australia |
Verstraeten et al. (2016) [39]; Ecuador | 751 | Range = 10–16; mean age = 13.6 | Cross-sectional study; 16 months | Cuenca and Nabón, Ecuador |
Study Authors | SES of Cohort | Observed Snacking Behaviors | Weight Outcomes | Assessments |
---|---|---|---|---|
Grenard et al. [40] | Low SES | High consumption of calorie-dense snacks in low SES sample (16.5% salty; 36.1% sweet). | Not assessed. | SES was self-reported via a questionnaire; snacking was measured via one-to-one interviews at baseline and through self-initiated and random eating event reports during the 7 day monitoring period. |
Hardy et al. [36] | Various SES groups | Male adolescents with lower SES have high rates of snacking (p = 0.045); female adolescents with higher SES have high rates of snacking (p = 0.034). | Smaller portion of male adolescents with overweight (OW)/obesity (OB) reported higher snacking than male adolescents without OW/OB (p < 0.001); no significant weight-related outcomes associated with snacking in female adolescents (p = 0.235). | Parents completed questionnaire with mother’s educational attainment and household income; dietary information was collected using questions based on the NSW Population Health Surveys’ food frequency questionnaire (FFQ). BMI was calculated for each participant using height and weight and OW/OB categorization was conducted via the International Obesity Task Force standards. |
Larson et al. [37] | Various SES groups | High–medium and high SES categories had low consumption of snacks. | Not assessed. | SES was self-reported via survey; Youth and Adolescent FFQ was used to assess adolescent snack consumption. |
Maruapula et al. [38] | Low and high SES groups | Higher SES adolescents consumed a larger quantity of snacks (p < 0.01). | High snack food diet was found to increase risk for OW/OB (p = 0.028); however, SES was not a significant determinant of OW/OB. | SES determined by attendance at tuition-free public or tuition-requiring private school and by the number of household assets. A single portable precision electronic scale and stadiometer were used to obtain anthropometric measurements; participants self-recorded their recall of food intake for the previous day. BMI was calculated for each participant using height and weight and was evaluated using the World Health Organization’s reference data for age and gender. |
Pérez et al. [41] | Low, middle, and high SES groups | In males, the habit of snacking decreases as SES increases, except in quartile 2—in which, snacking increases. In females, the habit of snacking increases, except from the first to second quartile—in which, snacking decreases. Quartile 1 has the highest snacking habits of any of the other SES quartiles. | Not assessed. | SES determined using the family socioeconomic level (FSEL); snack consumption measured using 24 h dietary recall and food frequency questionnaire adaptation of the short questionnaire on frequency of dietary intake. |
Schumacher et al. [42] | Low SES | Evidence of high snack consumption. In total, 6.8% of daily energy from snacks. Average of 1.5 snacks per day. | Not a significant association (p = 0.47). | The Australian Child and Adolescent Eating Survey (ACAES, version 1.2), an FFQ estimated dietary intake data over the previous 6 months; measured height and weight. BMI was calculated for each participant and then ranked into underweight, healthy, overweight, or obese categories. |
Verstraeten et al. [39] | “Poor” SES and “better off” SES groups | No significant association between low SES and unhealthy snack consumption. | Not assessed. | SES was measured using the Integrated Social Indicator System for Ecuador. Then, participants classified as “poor” or “better off”; snack consumption measured using 24 h dietary recall interviews. |
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Williamson, V.G.; Dilip, A.; Dillard, J.R.; Morgan-Daniel, J.; Lee, A.M.; Cardel, M.I. The Influence of Socioeconomic Status on Snacking and Weight among Adolescents: A Scoping Review. Nutrients 2020, 12, 167. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010167
Williamson VG, Dilip A, Dillard JR, Morgan-Daniel J, Lee AM, Cardel MI. The Influence of Socioeconomic Status on Snacking and Weight among Adolescents: A Scoping Review. Nutrients. 2020; 12(1):167. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010167
Chicago/Turabian StyleWilliamson, Victoria Guazzelli, Abhaya Dilip, Julia Rose Dillard, Jane Morgan-Daniel, Alexandra M. Lee, and Michelle I. Cardel. 2020. "The Influence of Socioeconomic Status on Snacking and Weight among Adolescents: A Scoping Review" Nutrients 12, no. 1: 167. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010167
APA StyleWilliamson, V. G., Dilip, A., Dillard, J. R., Morgan-Daniel, J., Lee, A. M., & Cardel, M. I. (2020). The Influence of Socioeconomic Status on Snacking and Weight among Adolescents: A Scoping Review. Nutrients, 12(1), 167. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12010167