Association between protein intake, diet quality, and obesity in Australian adults: a comparison of measurement units
Hesti Retno Budi Arini, Rebecca M. Leech, Sze-Yen Tan, Sarah A. McNaughton

TL;DR
This study found that higher protein intake in Australian adults is linked to better diet quality and higher obesity risk, with stronger effects in women.
Contribution
The study compares how different units of protein intake affect associations with diet quality and obesity.
Findings
Higher protein intake (g/d) was associated with better diet quality in both males and females.
Protein intake (g/d) was linked to higher BMI and waist circumference in both sexes.
The strength of associations varied by sex and measurement unit used for protein intake.
Abstract
Previous investigations on protein associations with diet quality and obesity still have inconclusive findings, possibly due to how protein intake was expressed. This study aimed to compare how different ways of expressing total protein intake may influence its relationships with diet quality and obesity. Usual protein intake was estimated from the 2011–12 Australian National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey (n = 7637 adults, ≥19 years), expressed in grams (g/d), percent energy (%EI), and grams per actual kilogram body weight (g/kgBW/d). Diet quality was assessed using the 2013 Dietary Guidelines Index, and obesity measures included Body Mass Index (BMI) and waist circumference (WC). Sex-stratified multiple linear and logistic regressions were performed and adjusted for potential confounders. Total protein (g/d) was directly associated with diet quality (males, β = 0.15 (95% CI…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutritional Studies and Diet · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Diet and metabolism studies
