A study has found that 'teenagers who eat lots of take-aways are more likely to behave badly,' reported the Daily Express. It said that the finding confirms the belief that poor diets are linked to mental health problems. According to the newspaper, the researchers blamed junk food for problems such as depression, aggression and delinquency.
This study looked at diet and behaviour in nearly 1,600 Australian adolescents, aged 14. The study cannot prove that diet caused the behavioural characteristics seen, as both diet and behaviour were assessed over the same period of time. Also, other factors may be responsible for both poor diet and poor behaviour. The study did not look at whether the children had received a formal mental health diagnosis, such as for depression, and therefore cannot say whether diet affects the likelihood of such diagnoses. A balanced, healthy diet has many benefits and should be encouraged for people of all ages.
Where did the story come from?
The research was carried out by Dr Wendy H Oddy and colleagues from the University of Western Australia and the Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Australia. The study was funded by the Raine Medical Research Foundation, the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, the Telstra Foundation, the Western Australian Health Promotion Foundation, the Australian Rotary Health Research Fund, the Telethon Institute for Child Health Research and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation.
The study was published in the peer-reviewed journal Preventive Medicine.
What kind of scientific study was this?
This was a cross-sectional analysis of children taking part in a prospective cohort study called the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study. The cohort study recruited 2,900 pregnant women between 1989 and 1991 in Perth, and 2,868 (96%) of the babies born to these women were available at birth for future follow-up.
The current study looked at data collected when the children were 14 years old, at which point 1,860 children participated (65% of those available for follow-up). At age 14, the children s behaviour was assessed using the Child Behaviour Checklist, a validated tool for assessing behaviour that is completed by the child s primary caregiver. This checklist gives the children an overall behaviour score, with higher scores indicating more behavioural problems. The score was also broken down to specifically measure the children s internalising behaviours (withdrawal, bodily [somatic] complaints or being anxious or depressed) and externalising behaviours (being delinquent or aggressive) over the previous six months.
The children s dietary patterns were assessed using a food frequency questionnaire that was completed by the child and their main caregiver. This questionnaire assessed the frequency and consumption of 212 food and drink items over the previous 12 months.


