The food propensity questionnaire: concept, development, and validation for use as a covariate in a model to estimate usual food intake
- PMID: 17000188
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jada.2006.07.002
The food propensity questionnaire: concept, development, and validation for use as a covariate in a model to estimate usual food intake
Abstract
Objective: Twenty-four-hour recalls capture rich information on food consumption, but suffer from inadequately measuring usual intakes of episodically consumed foods. We explore using food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) data as covariates in a statistical model to estimate individual usual intakes of episodically consumed foods and their distributions and describe the development of the Food Propensity Questionnaire, an FFQ introduced in the 2003-2004 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
Design: We analyzed data from 965 adult participants in the Eating at America's Table Study who completed four 24-hour recalls and an FFQ. We assessed whether or not increasing FFQ-reported frequency was associated with both number of 24-hour recall consumption days and amounts reported.
Results: For 52 of 56 food groups (93%), and 218 of 230 individual foods (95%), there were significant monotonically increasing relationships between FFQ frequency and 24-hour recall probability of consumption. For 47 of 56 food groups (84%) and 55 of 230 (24%) individual foods, there were significant positive correlations between FFQ frequencies and consumption-day mean intake.
Conclusions: We found strong and consistent relationships between reported FFQ frequency of food and food-group consumption and probability of consumption on 24-hour recalls. This supports the premise that frequency data may offer important covariate information in supplementing multiple recalls for estimating usual intake of food groups.
Comment in
-
Assessing dietary intake: new ideas and better approaches.J Am Diet Assoc. 2006 Oct;106(10):1533. doi: 10.1016/j.jada.2006.07.018. J Am Diet Assoc. 2006. PMID: 17000182 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical
