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Supplement use is associated with health status and health-related behaviors in the 1946 British birth cohort.

journal contribution
posted on 2005-07-01, 00:00 authored by Sarah McNaughtonSarah McNaughton, G Mishra, A Paul, C Prynne, M Wadsworth
Use of dietary supplements may be one of a number of health-related behaviors that cluster together. The current study investigated the underlying diet, health-related characteristics, and behaviors of users and nonusers of dietary supplements in a longitudinal study of health. Participants (n = 1776) completed a 5-d food diary including information on dietary supplement use (vitamins, minerals, and nutraceuticals) at age 53 y. Sociodemographic information and data on smoking, alcohol, and physical activity were obtained along with anthropometric measurements, blood pressure, and a blood sample (nonfasting subjects). A significantly greater percentage of women reported supplement use compared with men (45.1 vs. 25.2%). Supplement use was associated with lower BMI, lower waist circumference, higher plasma folate and plasma vitamin B-12 concentrations, nonsmoking, participation in physical activity, and nonmanual social class in women and with plasma folate concentrations and participation in physical activity in men. Nonsupplement users tended to be nonconsumers of breakfast cereals, fruit, fruit juice, yogurt, oily fish, and olive oil and had lower dietary intakes of potassium, magnesium, phosphorus, iron, and vitamin C even after adjustment for sociodemographic and behavioral factors. Overall, supplement users tended to differ from nonsupplement users on a range of health-related behaviors and health status indicators, although there were fewer significant associations in men. Similarly, dietary supplements users tended to have underlying diets that, were healthier and those taking supplements may be the least likely to need them. These results support the notion of a clustering of healthy behaviors and cardiovascular risk factors, particularly for women.

History

Journal

Journal of nutrition

Volume

135

Issue

7

Pagination

1782 - 1789

Publisher

American Society for Nutrition

Location

Bethesda, Md.

ISSN

0022-3166

eISSN

1541-6100

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2005, American Society for Nutritional Sciences