FOOD AND AGRICULTURE ORGANIZATION OF THE UNITED NATIONS | ESN:FAO/WHO/UNU EPR/81/18A October 1981 | |
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION | ||
THE UNITED NATIONS UNIVERSITY |
Provisional Agenda Item 2.4.2
Joint FAO/WHO/UNU Expert Consultation on Energy and Protein Requirements
Rome, 5 to 17 October 1981
ADDENDUM
FOOD ENERGY INTAKES THROUGHOUT CHILDHOOD: 1 TO 18 YEARS
R.G.Whitehead, A.A.Paul
and
T.J. Cole
Addendum
Food energy intakes throughout childhood: 1 to 18 years
R.G. Whitehead, A.A. Paul and T.J. Cole
Summary and Conclusions
The analysis of studies on food energy intakes throughout childhood has been extended to include data from other industrialised countries as well as the UK. For boys, intakes start to fall slightly below the WHO/FAO recommendations at 7 years of age, but by 16 years the mean intake is some 300 kcal/d lower. From age 5, girls show a consistently even lower intake than the recommendation which is most evident between 13 and 18 years, amounting to over 400 kcal/d. In comparison with earlier studies from the UK and USA carried out between 1930 and 1960, present day intakes during the teenage years are very much lower, yet the reported body weights of the children in all studies are close to the NCHS 50th centile. There is indication that the present day peak intakes of both boys and girls occurs slightly earlier than previously, and it corresponds approximately to the peak in the adolescent growth spurt.
A fuller discussion of this analysis is in preparation.
Ref No. | Authors | Years of Study | Country | Subjects | Numbers | Dietary Method |
20 (P) | McNaughton & Cahn (1970) | 1961 | Australia | School + work | 92 Boys, 186 girls 16–19 years Cross sectional | 7 day record, weights + household measures |
21 (Q) | (Hampton et al. (1967) (Huenemann et al. (1967) | 1963–65 | USA | School. Caucasian, Negro, Oriental | 279 Boys, 335 girls 16–17 years Cross sectional and longitudinal | 7 day diary of amounts |
22 (R) | Steel & Johnson (1975) | 1954–71 | Australia | Melbourne - Baby Health Centres. British stock | 60 boys, 60 girls Longit 2–18 y | 7 d record - descriptive |
23 (T) | Wharton (1963) | 1956–58 | USA | 3 Schools. University town high school. Mining area. S. European, Negro. | 146 Boys, 275 girls 13–18 years | 3 days record, standard measures and servings |
24 | (Eppright et al. (1954) (Eppright & Stuart (1959) | 1948–52 | USA | Random from 61 schools Iowa | 1,188 cross-sectional, 6 to 18 y approx. 30–60 boys and girls each year | 7 day prospective record |
25 | (Burke et al. (1959) (Reed & Stuart (1959) | 1930–56 | USA | Via prenatal clinic N. European stock Boston | 67 boys, 67 girls Longitudinal 1–18 y | Diet history by interview Usual intake + cross check |
26 | Widdowson (1947) | 1935–39 | UK | Volunteers, mainly London & S.E. England. Mostly middle class. | 916 Cross sectional 20–30 boys and girls each y from 1–18 y | 7 d weighed record |
* Details of references 1 to 19 are given in the position paper, plus appendix, on “Food energy requirements of infants and pre-school children”.
Age (years) | Predicted energy intake | WHO/FAO (1973) | ||
Boys | Girls | Boys | Girls | |
1–2 | 1300 | 1200 | 1180 | 1180 |
2–3 | 1440 | 1340 | 1360 | 1350 |
3–4 | 1570 | 1470 | 1560 | 1520 |
4–5 | 1700 | 1590 | 1720 | 1670 |
5–6 | 1820 | 1690 | 1870 | 1790 |
6–7 | 1940 | 1780 | 2010 | 1900 |
7–8 | 2050 | 1860 | 2140 | 2010 |
8–9 | 2150 | 1930 | 2260 | 2110 |
9–10 | 2250 | 1980 | 2380 | 2210 |
10–11 | 2340 | 2020 | 2500 | 2300 |
11–12 | 2430 | 2050 | 2600 | 2350 |
12–13 | 2510 | 2060 | 2700 | 2400 |
13–14 | 2580 | 2060 | 2800 | 2450 |
14–15 | 2650 | 2050 | 2900 | 2500 |
15–16 | 2710 | 2020 | 3000 | 2500 |
16–17 | 2770 | 1980 | 3050 | 2420 |
17–18 | 2820 | 1930 | 3100 | 2340 |
18–19 | 2860 | 1870 | 3100 | 2270 |
Boys: Energy = 1077 + 151.7 years - 3.0 years2
Girls: Energy = 955 + 169.4 years - 6.5 years2
References to additional studies*
Burke, B.S., Reed, R.B., van den Berg, A.S. and Stuart, H.C. (1959) Caloric and protein intakes of children between 1 and 18 years of age. Pediatrics 24 922–940.
Eppright, E.S, and Sidwell, V.D. (1954) Physical measurements of Iowa schoolchildren. J. Nutr. 54 543–556.
Eppright, E.S., Sidwell, V.D. and Swanson, P.P. (1954) Nutritive value of the diets of Iowa schoolchildren. J. Nutr. 54 371–388.
Hampton, M.C., Huenemann, R.L., Shapiro, L.R., Mitchell, B.W. (1967) Caloric and nutrient intakes of teenagers. J. Amer. diet Ass. 50 385–396.
Hansman C. (1970) Anthropometry and related data, anthropometry skinfold thickness measurements. In Human Growth and Development. R.W. McCammon ed. C.C. Thomas, Springfield.
McNaughton, J.W. and Cahn, A.J. (1970) A study of the food intake and activity of a group of urban adolescents. Br. J. Nutr. 24 331–344.
Reed, R.B. and Stuart, H.C. (1959) Patterns of growth in height and weight from birth to eighteen years of age. Pediatrics 24 904–921.
Steel, J.E. and Johnson, J.M. (1975) Nutrient intakes of the subjects of the Melbourne University Child Growth Study. J. Diet. Ass. Vic. 26 18–26.
Wharton, M.A. (1963) Nutritive intake of adolescents. J. Amer. diet Ass. 42 306–310.
Widdowson, E.M. (1947) A study of individual children's diets. Spec. Rep. Ser. Med. Res. Counc. No. 257. London HMSO.
* References 1 to 19 are given in the position paper, plus appendix, “Food energy requirements of infants and pre-school children”.
Fig. 1. Energy intakes (kcal/d) of boys and girls from 1 to 18 years compared to WHO/FAO 1973 recommendations. Numbers and letters refer to reference numbers given in Tables 1 and 1A of the position paper and Table 1B. The solid line is the fitted quadratic regression line for Boys Energy = 1077 + 151.7 years - 3.0 years2 and for girls Energy = 955 + 169.4 years - 6.5 years2
Fig. 2. Energy intakes (kcal/d) of boys and girls studied between 1930–1959 compared to more recent studies. Symbols are for the references as follows 5, Ñ8,Ñ21,Ñ23, Δ12, Δ17,Δ18,Δ19, ◊20, □ 22, ▼ 24, • 25, ▲ 26.
Fig. 3. Energy intakes (kcal/kg) of boys and girls from 1 to 18 years compared to WHO/FAO 1973 recommendations. Numbers and letters as for Fig. 1.
Fig. 4. Energy intakes (kcal/kg) for boys and girls from 1 to 18 years studied between 1930–1959 compared to more recent studies. Symbols as for Fig. 2.
Fig. 5. Body weights of boys and girls shown in Fig. 1, compared to NCHS 50th Centiles.
Fig. 6. Comparison between body weights of boys and girls studied between 1930–1959 and those from more recent studies. Symbols as for Fig. 2.