Pandemic effects and gluten-free diet: an adherence and mental health problem
Author
dc.contributor.author
Bascuñán Gamboa, Karla
Author
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Rodríguez Silva, Juan Manuel
Author
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Osben Rojas, Carla
Author
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Fernández, Alan
Author
dc.contributor.author
Sepúlveda Gúzman, Carlos
Author
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Araya Quezada, María Magdalena
Admission date
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2021-09-10T18:29:07Z
Available date
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2021-09-10T18:29:07Z
Publication date
dc.date.issued
2021
Cita de ítem
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Nutrients 2021, 13, 1822
es_ES
Identifier
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10.3390/nu13061822
Identifier
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https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/181955
Abstract
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The COVID-19 pandemic has been present for many months, influencing diets such as the gluten-free diet (GFD), which implies daily challenges even in non-pandemic conditions. Persons following the GFD were invited to answer online ad hoc and validated questionnaires characterizing self-perceptions of the pandemic, current clinical condition, dietary characteristics, adherence to GFD, anxiety, and depression. Of 331 participants, 87% experienced shortage and higher cost of food and 14.8% lost their jobs. Symptoms increased in 29% and 36.6% failed to obtain medical help. Although 52.3% increased food preparation at home and purchased alternative foodstuffs, 53.8% had consumed gluten-containing foods. The Health Eating Index was intermediate/"needs improvement" (mean 65.6 +/- 13.3 points); in 49.9% (perception) and 44.4% (questionnaire), adherence was "bad". Anxiety and depression scores were above the cutoff in 28% and 40.4%, respectively. Adherence and mental health were strongly related. The likelihood of poor adherence was 2.3 times higher (p < 0.004) in participants declaring that pandemic altered GFD. Those suffering depressive symptoms were 1.3 times more likely to have poor adherence (p < 0.000). Depression and faulty GFD (mandatory for treatment) appear, affecting a high proportion of participants, suggesting that support measures aimed at these aspects would help improve the health condition of people that maintain GFD. Comparisons of data currently appearing in the literature available should be cautious because not only cultural aspects but conditions and timing of data collection are most variable.