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Noodle consumption patterns of american consumers: NHANES 2001-2002

Title
Noodle consumption patterns of american consumers: NHANES 2001-2002
Authors
Chung, Chin EunLee, Kyung WonCho, Mi Sook
Ewha Authors
조미숙
SCOPUS Author ID
조미숙scopus
Issue Date
2010
Journal Title
NUTRITION RESEARCH AND PRACTICE
ISSN
1976-1457JCR Link
Citation
NUTRITION RESEARCH AND PRACTICE vol. 4, no. 3, pp. 243 - 251
Keywords
Noodlesfood and diet consumption patternsNHANES 2001-2002Americans
Publisher
KOREAN NUTRITION SOC
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS; KCI WOS
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Although noodles occupy an important place in the dietary lives of Americans, up until the present time research and in-depth data on the noodle consumption patterns of the US population have been very limited. Therefore, this study aimed to analyze the food consumption and diet patterns of noodle consumers and non-consumers according to age, gender, income, and ethnicity. The 2001-2002 NHANES databases were used. The NHANES 2001-2002 data showed that noodle consumers reporting noodle consumption in their 24-h recall were 2,035 individuals (23.3% of total subjects). According to the results, the mean noodle consumption was 304.1 g/day/person, with 334.3 g for males and 268.0 g for females. By age, the intake of those in the age range of 9-18 years old ranked highest at 353.0 g, followed by the order of 19-50 year-olds with 333.5 g, 51-70 year-olds with by 280.4 g, older than 71years old with 252.3 g, and 1-8 year-olds with 221.5 g. By gender, males consumed more noodles than females. Also, according to income, the intake amount for the middle-income level (PIR 1 similar to 1.85) of consumers was highest at 312.5 g. Noodle intake also showed different patterns by ethnicity in which the "other" ethnic group consumed the most noodles with 366.1 g, followed by, in order, Hispanics with 318.7 g, Whites with 298.6 g, and Blacks with 289.5 g. After comparing food consumption by dividing the subjects into noodle consumers and non-consumers, the former was more likely to consume milk, fish, citrus fruits, tomatoes, and alcoholic beverages while the latter preferred meat, poultry, bread, and non-alcohol beverages.
DOI
10.4162/nrp.2010.4.3.243
Appears in Collections:
신산업융합대학 > 식품영양학과 > Journal papers
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