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Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents

BACKGROUND: Dietary intake during childhood and adolescence is of increasing interest due to its influence on adult health, particularly obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes. There is a need to develop and validate dietary assessment methods suitable for large epidemiologic studies of childr...

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Autores principales: Watson, Jane F, Collins, Clare E, Sibbritt, David W, Dibley, Michael J, Garg, Manohar L
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2758826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19744349
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-6-62
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author Watson, Jane F
Collins, Clare E
Sibbritt, David W
Dibley, Michael J
Garg, Manohar L
author_facet Watson, Jane F
Collins, Clare E
Sibbritt, David W
Dibley, Michael J
Garg, Manohar L
author_sort Watson, Jane F
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dietary intake during childhood and adolescence is of increasing interest due to its influence on adult health, particularly obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes. There is a need to develop and validate dietary assessment methods suitable for large epidemiologic studies of children and adolescents. Limited large scale dietary studies of youth have been undertaken in Australia, due partly to the lack of a suitable dietary intake tool. A self-administered, semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ), the 'Australian Child and Adolescent Eating Survey' (ACAES), was developed for youth aged 9-16 years. This study evaluated reproducibility and comparative validity of the ACAES FFQ using assisted food records (FRs) as the reference method. METHODS: The ACAES FFQ was completed twice (FFQ1 and FFQ2) at an interval of 5 months, along with four one-day assisted FRs. Validity was evaluated by comparing the average of the FRs with FFQ2 (n = 113) as well as with the average of FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n = 101). Reproducibility was evaluated by comparing FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n = 101). The two methods were compared using correlations, Kappa statistics and Bland-Altman plots. RESULTS: Correlation coefficients for comparative validity ranged from 0.03 for retinol to 0.56 for magnesium for transformed, energy-adjusted, deattenuated nutrient data, with correlation coefficients greater than 0.40 for total fat, saturated fat, monounsaturated fat, carbohydrate, sugars, riboflavin, vitamin C, folate, beta-carotene, magnesium, calcium and iron. Correlation coefficients for reproducibility ranged from 0.18 for vitamin A to 0.50 for calcium for transformed, energy-adjusted, deattenuated nutrient data. The ACAES FFQ ranked individuals reasonably accurately, with the comparative validity analysis showing that over 50% of participants were classified within one quintile for all nutrients, with only a small percentage grossly misclassified (0-7%). CONCLUSION: The ACAES FFQ is the first child and adolescent specific FFQ available for ranking the dietary intakes of Australian children and adolescents for a range of nutrients in epidemiologic research and public health interventions.
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spelling pubmed-27588262009-10-08 Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents Watson, Jane F Collins, Clare E Sibbritt, David W Dibley, Michael J Garg, Manohar L Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act Methodology BACKGROUND: Dietary intake during childhood and adolescence is of increasing interest due to its influence on adult health, particularly obesity, cardiovascular disease and diabetes. There is a need to develop and validate dietary assessment methods suitable for large epidemiologic studies of children and adolescents. Limited large scale dietary studies of youth have been undertaken in Australia, due partly to the lack of a suitable dietary intake tool. A self-administered, semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire (FFQ), the 'Australian Child and Adolescent Eating Survey' (ACAES), was developed for youth aged 9-16 years. This study evaluated reproducibility and comparative validity of the ACAES FFQ using assisted food records (FRs) as the reference method. METHODS: The ACAES FFQ was completed twice (FFQ1 and FFQ2) at an interval of 5 months, along with four one-day assisted FRs. Validity was evaluated by comparing the average of the FRs with FFQ2 (n = 113) as well as with the average of FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n = 101). Reproducibility was evaluated by comparing FFQ1 and FFQ2 (n = 101). The two methods were compared using correlations, Kappa statistics and Bland-Altman plots. RESULTS: Correlation coefficients for comparative validity ranged from 0.03 for retinol to 0.56 for magnesium for transformed, energy-adjusted, deattenuated nutrient data, with correlation coefficients greater than 0.40 for total fat, saturated fat, monounsaturated fat, carbohydrate, sugars, riboflavin, vitamin C, folate, beta-carotene, magnesium, calcium and iron. Correlation coefficients for reproducibility ranged from 0.18 for vitamin A to 0.50 for calcium for transformed, energy-adjusted, deattenuated nutrient data. The ACAES FFQ ranked individuals reasonably accurately, with the comparative validity analysis showing that over 50% of participants were classified within one quintile for all nutrients, with only a small percentage grossly misclassified (0-7%). CONCLUSION: The ACAES FFQ is the first child and adolescent specific FFQ available for ranking the dietary intakes of Australian children and adolescents for a range of nutrients in epidemiologic research and public health interventions. BioMed Central 2009-09-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2758826/ /pubmed/19744349 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-6-62 Text en Copyright © 2009 Watson et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Methodology
Watson, Jane F
Collins, Clare E
Sibbritt, David W
Dibley, Michael J
Garg, Manohar L
Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents
title Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents
title_full Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents
title_fullStr Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents
title_full_unstemmed Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents
title_short Reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for Australian children and adolescents
title_sort reproducibility and comparative validity of a food frequency questionnaire for australian children and adolescents
topic Methodology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2758826/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19744349
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1479-5868-6-62
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