Literature DB >> 23830074

The reliability and relative validity of a diet index score for 4-11-year-old children derived from a parent-reported short food survey.

Gilly A Hendrie1, Elizabeth Viner Smith1, Rebecca K Golley2.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the reliability and relative validity of a diet index score derived from a Short Food Survey (SFS).
DESIGN: The thirty-eight-item SFS was designed to assess recent dietary intake of 4-11-year-olds to enable calculation of the Dietary Guideline Index for Children and Adolescents. Reliability was assessed based on two online administrations of the SFS, one week apart. Relative validity was assessed by comparing intakes derived from the SFS with those from the mean of three 24 h recalls. Intra-class correlations, Bland-Altman plots and estimated biases were assessed. Cohen's κ coefficients were used to determine the level of agreement between the two methods.
SETTING: Adelaide, Australia.
SUBJECTS: Sixty-three parents reported on their children's intake (mean age 7·1 (sd 2·1) years).
RESULTS: The intra-class correlation for reliability ranged from 0·43 for dairy foods to 0·94 for beverages, and was 0·92 for total diet index score (all P < 0·01). The intra-class correlation for validity ranged from 0·04 for meat and alternatives to 0·41-0·44 for fruit, beverages and extra foods, and was 0·44 for the total diet index score. The SFS overestimated the mean diet index score by 16 %, and the bias was consistent across levels of compliance. The percentage agreement into tertiles of index scores was 84% between the administrations of the two SFS, but only 43 % when comparing the SFS with the mean of the recalls.
CONCLUSIONS: The SFS can provide a consistent estimate of overall compliance to dietary guidelines for children aged 4-11 years, but overestimated the total diet index score by 16 % across all levels of compliance.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23830074     DOI: 10.1017/S1368980013001778

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Public Health Nutr        ISSN: 1368-9800            Impact factor:   4.022


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4.  Compliance with Dietary Guidelines Varies by Weight Status: A Cross-Sectional Study of Australian Adults.

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9.  The Relative Validity of the Menzies Remote Short-Item Dietary Assessment Tool (MRSDAT) in Aboriginal Australian Children Aged 6⁻36 Months.

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Authors:  Janelle A Gifford; Josephine D Gwynn; Louise L Hardy; Nicole Turner; Lily C Henderson; Christine Innes-Hughes; Victoria M Flood
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