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The Dietary Status of Adults With ADHD

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

J.N. Kjaer
Affiliation:
Aarhus University Hospital, Department of Affective Disorders, Risskov, Denmark
L. Jakobsen
Affiliation:
Public Health and Quality Improvement, Central Region Denmark, Aarhus, Denmark
M. Lasgaard
Affiliation:
Public Health and Quality Improvement, Central Region Denmark, Aarhus, Denmark
P. Munk-Jørgensen
Affiliation:
Psychiatric Research Academy, Aarhus University Hospital, Århus, Denmark

Abstract

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Objective

The aim was to investigate the dietary status of adults with ADHD. Furthermore, we compared the group with a representative sample of a healthy adult Danish population.

Method

Data were collected from the ADHD database operated by the ADHD outpatient clinic at Aarhus university hospital. We used data from newly referred patients in a seven months period from April 2014 through October 2014. The collected data include weight, height, blood pressure, somatic or psychiatric co-morbidity, blood sample, physical activity scale. Concerning the diagnosis of ADHD: DIVA, ASRS, BRIEF-V. Inter99 was used to assess the dietary status. The representative sample was obtained as a part of a public health survey from 2010 called “how are you” conducted in the same region of Denmark as the location of the psychiatric hospital. Preliminary results, one hundred and forty-three patients were included in the study, 52% males. The mean age was 30.9 years. A larger proportion of ADHD patients fall in the category “unhealthy dietary pattern” compared to the representative sample population (26% vs. 12%), while the proportion in the “healthy dietary pattern” category is markedly lower (14% vs. 24%). The differences seem to be explained by lower than recommended intakes of fruits and vegetables.

Conclusion

Our findings suggest a general shift towards more unhealthy dietary patterns among patients with ADHD. This exposes them to higher risk of somatic diseases, notably diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease. Lifestyle interventions could be a necessary part of standard treatment for patients with ADHD.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Walk: Epidemiology and social psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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