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Published in: European Journal of Nutrition 8/2017

01-12-2017 | Original Contribution

Age and time trends in eating frequency and duration of nightly fasting of German children and adolescents

Authors: Sarah Roßbach, Tanja Diederichs, Katja Bolzenius, Christian Herder, Anette E. Buyken, Ute Alexy

Published in: European Journal of Nutrition | Issue 8/2017

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Abstract

Purpose

To describe age and time trends in eating occasion frequency (EOF), meal frequency (MF), snack frequency (SF) and duration of nightly fasting (DNF) in German children and adolescents.

Methods

9757 3-day dietary records of 1246 3–18-year-old participants of the open DONALD cohort study, collected 1985–2014, were analyzed for age and time trends using polynomial mixed-effects regression models. Eating occasions were either assigned to meals or snacks (>10 or ≤10 % of daily total energy intake per eating occasion). DNF was defined as the longest time span without energy intake within one night.

Results

EOF, MF and SF decreased with age (EOF: linear, quadratic, cubic trend p < 0.0001; MF: linear trend p < 0.0001; SF: linear, quadratic trend p < 0.0001). Time trend analyses revealed a wavelike time course for EOF (linear trend p = 0.0580, quadratic trend = 0.0039, cubic trend = 0.0015) and SF (linear trend p = 0.0055, quadratic trend p = 0.0005, cubic trend p = 0.0003). MF slightly increased until 2000 and decreased thereafter (linear trend p = 0.0012, quadratic trend p = 0.0047). Effect sizes of time trends in EOF, MF and SF were small. Boys’ and girls’ DNF decreased with age (in both: linear, quadratic, cubic trend p < 0.0001) and increased over the study period (boys: linear trend p = 0.0011, interaction of age and time p < 0.0001; girls: linear trend p = 0.0167).

Conclusion

EOF, MF and SF were higher in children than in adolescents, but, in contrast to other studies remained fairly stable over the study period. Decreasing DNF with age could reflect decreasing sleep durations. Additionally, DNF increased over the study period, probably due to an increase in breakfast skipping.
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Metadata
Title
Age and time trends in eating frequency and duration of nightly fasting of German children and adolescents
Authors
Sarah Roßbach
Tanja Diederichs
Katja Bolzenius
Christian Herder
Anette E. Buyken
Ute Alexy
Publication date
01-12-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Nutrition / Issue 8/2017
Print ISSN: 1436-6207
Electronic ISSN: 1436-6215
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00394-016-1286-x

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