| Literature DB >> 24198966 |
Lucinda K Bell1, Rebecca K Golley, Anthea M Magarey.
Abstract
Dietary indices evaluate diet quality, usually based on current dietary guidelines. Indices can therefore contribute to our understanding of early-life obesity-risk dietary behaviours. Yet indices are commonly applied to dietary data collected by onerous methods (e.g., recalls or records). Short dietary assessment instruments are an attractive alternative to collect data from which to derive an index score. A systematic review of studies published before April 2013 was conducted to identify short (≤50 items) tools that measure whole-of-diet intake of young children (birth-five years) and are applicable to dietary indices, in particular screening obesogenic dietary behaviours. The search identified 3686 papers of which 16, reporting on 15 tools (n = 7, infants and toddlers birth-24 months; n = 8, preschoolers 2-5 years), met the inclusion criteria. Most tools were food frequency questionnaires (n = 14), with one innovative dietary questionnaire identified. Seven were tested for validity or reliability, and one was tested for both. Six tools (n = 2, infants and toddlers; n = 4, preschoolers) are applicable for use with current dietary indices, five of which screen obesogenic dietary behaviours. Given the limited number of brief, valid and reliable dietary assessment tools for young children to which an index can be applied, future short tool development is warranted, particularly for screening obesogenic dietary behaviours.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24198966 PMCID: PMC3807550 DOI: 10.1155/2013/709626
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Figure 1Quorom statement flow diagram. Studies assessing whole-of-diet intake of infants and toddlers and pre-schoolers using a short assessment tool.
Characteristics of included studies (n = 16) and their tools (n = 15).
| Reference, details, country | Age diet assessed, sample size (gender) | Dietary intake measurement | Outcomes (food, energy, and/or nutrient intakes) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type and name (if provided) of toola | Number of food items | Tool reference period | Self- or interviewer administeredb | Number of response categories (range) | Other tool details | |||
| Infants and toddlers (birth-24 months) | ||||||||
| Smithers et al. (2012) [ | 6 mo, | Nonquantitative FFQ | 43 | “nowadays” | Self | Report “ | Items include milk drinks (including formula, BM), cereals (baby, other), rusks, bread/toast, biscuits, ready-to-eat meat/fish/vegetables/baby puddings (fruit, milk), home-cooked meat/fish/vegetables/potatoes/other vegetables/puddings (fruit, milk), raw fruit/vegetables, beverages (juice, fizzy drinks, tea, coffee, and water), sweets, crisps, and chocolate | Foods |
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| Ystrom et al. (2009) [ | 18 mo, | Nonquantitative | 36 | “Current diet”; NFS | Self | Drinks, (never to ≥5 times/day); Foods, (never to ≥3 times/day) | Items include dairy products (milk, yoghurt), meat, fish, fruit, vegetables, potato, porridge, bread, rice, water, fruit juice, soda, chocolate, sweets, desserts, and cakes | Foods |
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| Dee et al. (2008) [ | 6 mo, | Nonquantitative | 21 | 1 wk | Self | Report number of feedings per day or per week | Items include milk (BM, formula, cows, rice, goat, and soy), other dairy (yoghurt, cheese, ice-cream, and pudding), other soy foods (tofu, soy desserts), fruit and vegetable juice, sweet drinks, baby cereal, other cereals (breakfast cereals, biscuits, breads, rice, pasta, etc.), fruit, vegetables, French fries, meat and chicken, fish, nut-based foods, eggs, sweet foods (candy, cookies, cake, etc.), and other | Foods |
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| Marriott et al. (2008) [ | 6 mo, | Quantitative FFQ | 34 | 1 wk | Interviewer | Open responses | Items include meat, fish, vegetables, fruits, cereals, snack foods, commercial baby foods, non-milk drinks and human milk, baby formulas, and other milks. Portion size estimated using household measures | Energy nutrients |
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| Andersen et al. (2004) [ | 24 mo, | Semi-quantitative FFQ | 15 | 2 wk | Self | Not specified (never/<1/month to several times/day) | 125 foods grouped into 15 questions based on the Norwegian meal pattern. Items include dairy (milk, yoghurt, and cheese), bread, potatoes, vegetables, fruit, meat, fish, cake, chocolate, and soft drinks. Other questions on dietary supplements, food habits, and child nutrition information sources. Portion size estimated using a photographic booklet with four different sized (small–large) or household units (e.g., slices, pieces, and spoons) | Foods Energy Nutrients |
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| Andersen et al. (2003) [ | 12 mo, | Semiquantitative | 18 | 2 wk | Self | Not specified | 140 foods grouped into 18 questions based on the Norwegian meal pattern. Items include dairy (milk, yoghurt, and cheese), baby cereal, bread, potatoes, vegetables, fruit, meat, sweetened drinks; and commercial baby foods. Other questions on dietary supplements food habits, child nutrition information sources. Portion size estimated using a photographic booklet with four different sized (small–large) or household units (e.g., slices, pieces, and spoons) | Foods |
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| Lartey et al. (2000) [ | 1–6 mo, | Nonquantitative FFQ | 28 | 1 wk | NR | NR | Items include porridges, fruits, vegetables, soups, cereals, legumes, roots and tubers, animal products, cereal-legume mixtures, and cereal-animal product mixtures. Other questions on breastfeeding frequency and daily number other milk feedings | Foods |
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| Preschoolers (2–5 years; 25–60 months) | ||||||||
| Pabayo et al. (2012) [ | 4-5 y, | Nonquantitative FFQ | 20 | Usual intake; NFS | Self | Report total number of daily or weekly servings | Items include fruits, vegetables, grain products (bread, cereal, pasta, and rice), milk and alternatives (white or flavoured, soy or rice beverages, cheese, and yogurt), and meat and alternatives (meat, poultry, fish, peanut butter, nuts, and tofu), chips, French fries, candy, chocolate, regular soft drinks, and cakes and cookies | Foods |
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| Lanfer et al. (2011) [ | 2–9 y (2–<6y, 39.5%; 6–<10 y, 60.5%), | Nonquantitative | 43 | 4 wk | Self | 8 (never/<1/week to ≥4/day and “I have no idea”) | Items include vegetables, potatoes, fruit, meat, fish, egg, cereals, bread, pasta, dairy (cheese, milk, and yoghurt), sweetened beverages, spreads, sauces, take-away products, salty snacks, chocolate, candy, cake, and ice-cream. | Foods |
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| Ebenegger et al. (2010) [ | Mean 5 y, | Nonquantitative | 39 | 4 wk | Self | 7 (NR) | Items include fruit, vegetables, potato, meat, fish, dairy (yoghurt, cheese, and dairy desserts), bread, cereal, sauces, sweets and snacks (e.g., chocolate), and drinks (e.g., cola). Other questions on eating habits | Foods |
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| Kleiser et al. (2009) [ | 3–17y, (3–6 y, 7–10 y, 11–17 y), | Semiquantitative | 45 | Previous “few wks”; NFS | Self | 10 (never to >5/day) | Items include vegetables, fruit, fish, bread/cereal, rice/pasta/potatoes, milk/dairy products, eggs, meat, fats, sweets/fatty snacks/soft drinks, and other beverages. Other questions on eating habits, supplement intake, fortified foods, light products, convenience food, and probiotic products. Portion size estimated using illustrations or standard household measures | Foods |
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| Huybrechts et al. (2009) [ | 2.5–6.5 y, | Semiquantitative | 47 | 12 mo | Self | 6 (every day to never or less than 1 day/month) | Items include beverages (water, juice, and milk drinks), dairy (cheese, yoghurt), meat and meat alternatives (fish, eggs), bread, pasta, rice, vegetables, fruit, potatoes (including fried), meat/fish products, chocolate, sweet snacks, salty snacks, and desserts. Other questions on food habits of some product groups. | Foods |
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| Randall Simpson et al. (2008) [ | 3-4 y, | Nonquantitative screening tool; NutriSTEP | 6 | Usual intake; NFS | Self | NR | Items include grains, milk, fruit, vegetables, meat, and fast food. | Foods |
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| Romaguera et al. (2008) [ | 2–9 y (mean boys = 5.1; girls = 5.2), | Semiquantitative FFQ | 46 | NR | Interviewer | NR | Items include cereals/grains, potatoes/tubers, pulses, fish, meat/meat products, eggs, milk/dairy products, fruits and vegetables, fats, added oil, sugary drinks, herbal teas, and added sugar and sweets, sweet and milky desserts. Portion sizes determined according to the observed amount usually consumed in population, measured prior to study. | Foods energy nutrients |
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| Sullivan et al. (2006) [ | <60 mo, | Nonquantitative FFQ | 47 | 2 mo | Self | 9 (1, 2, and 3/day; 1, 2, 3/week; 0, 1, and 2/month) | Items include fruits, vegetables, legumes and nuts, dairy products, meat, fish, and poultry. | Foods |
FFQ: food frequency questionnaire; iDEFICS: Identification and prevention of dietary- and lifestyle-induced health effects in children and infants; NFS: not further specified; mo: months; NR: not reported; USA: United States of America; UK: United Kingdom; y: years.
aTools were defined as quantitative (quantity of food consumed was estimated using weights, measures, or food models), semiquantitative (quantity of food consumed estimated using a standard portion size, serving, or a predetermined amount and respondent asked about the number of portions consumed), or nonquantitative (quantity of food consumed not assessed).
bSelf-administered (primary caregiver completed the dietary assessment without assistance); interviewer-administered (a trained interviewer elicited the dietary assessment information from the primary care-giver in a one-on-one setting).
cItaly, Estonia, Cyprus, Belgium, Sweden, Germany, Hungary, and Spain.
Summary of availability of validity and reproducibility data for each study according to energy and/or nutrient intake and food intake.
| Reference details | Validity | Reliability | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Energy and/or nutrients | Foods | Energy and/or nutrients | Foods | |
| Infants and toddlers (birth-24 months) | ||||
| Smithers et al. (2012) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Ystrom et al. (2009) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Dee et al. (2008) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Marriott et al. (2008) [ |
| — | — | — |
| Andersen et al. (2004) [ |
|
| — | — |
| Andersen et al. (2003) [ |
|
| — | — |
| Lartey et al. (2000) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Preschoolers (2–5 years) | ||||
| Pabayo et al. (2012) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Lanfer et al. (2011) [ | — | — | — |
|
| Ebenegger et al. (2010) [ | — | — | — |
|
| Kleiser et al. (2009) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Huybrechts et al. (2009) [ | — |
| — |
|
| Huybrechts et al. (2006) [ |
| — |
| — |
| Randall Simpson et al. (2008) [ | — | — | — |
|
| Romaguera et al. (2008) [ | — | — | — | — |
| Sullivan et al. (2006) [ | — | — | — | — |
Short dietary assessment tool validity studies among infants and toddlers (birth-24 months) and preschoolers (2–5 years).
| Reference details; tool length; validation standard; reference period; sample size | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Infants and toddlers (birth-24 months) | Pre-schoolers (2–5 years) | ||||
| Marriott et al. (2008) [ | Andersen et al. (2003) [ | Andersen et al. (2004) [ | Huybrechts et al. (2009) [ | Huybrechts et al. (2006) [ | |
| Energy and nutrients | |||||
| Mean/median nutrient intakes | All median intakes significant higher ( | All median intakes significant higher ( | All median intakes significant higher ( | — | Significantly lower mean Ca intake: 777 mg/d v 838 ± 305 mg/d; difference 61 ± 294 mg/d ( |
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| Mean/median nutrient densities | — | No significant differences except for protein, SFA, MUFA, fibre, vitamin A, vitamin C, calcium, and iron | No significant differences except for protein, SFA, MUFA, fibre, vitamin A, vitamin C, calcium, and iron | — | — |
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| Pearson's correlation | — | — | — | — |
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| Spearman's correlation (nutrients) |
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| — | — |
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| Spearman's correlation (foods) | — |
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| — |
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| Specificity | — | — | — | — | 77% |
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| Sensitivity | — | — | — | — | 62% |
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| Bland Altman, mean bias | Mostly positive, all nutrients within range −12.5% to 12.5%, except vitamin B12 (−18.9%). | Systematic increase in difference with increasing intake, except Ca | Systematic increase in difference with increasing intake for most nutrients | — | Large differences, higher for greater mean intakes |
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| Bland Altman, limits of agreement | — | Large for all nutrients | Large for all nutrients | — | — |
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| Cross classification; nutrients | — | Same quartile, 38% (range 22% fibre—56% SFA); opposite, 3% | Same quartile, 36% (range 29% fat—44% vitamin A); opposite, 5% Energy-adjusted: same, 42%; opposite, 4% | — | Same quartile, 42%; within one, 83%; opposite, 2.4%; difference between quartiles |
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| Foods | |||||
| Mean/median food group intakes | — | — | — | Mean differences within ±10% 6/13 food groups, 11–30% 6/13, >40% 1/13; median differences within ±10% 5/13 food groups, 11–20% 1/13, >20% 6/13; 100% for 1/13 | — |
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| Wilcoxon signed rank test | — | Significantly higher intakes 11/17 food groups, NS differences 6/17 | Significantly higher intakes 7/15 food groups, significantly lower intakes 3/1, NS difference for 5/15 | Significantly different intake distribution for 6/13 ( | — |
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| Kappa statistic | — | — | — | <0.20 4/13 food groups, 0.20–0.40 | 0.38 (95% CI 0.34, 0.42) |
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| Bland Altman, mean bias | — | — | — | Increasing bias with increasing intakes for “many foods” ( | — |
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| Cross classification; foods | — | — | — | Same = NR, within one = 67%–88%, opposite <10% (2% fruit, fruit juices, and milk products—9% meat products) | — |
Ca: calcium; carb: carbohydrates; d: day; EDR: estimated dietary record; LOA: limits of agreement; MUFA: monounsaturated fatty acids; NR: not reported; NS: not significant; %: percent; PUFA: polyunsaturated fatty acids; SFA: saturated fatty acids; WDR: weighed dietary record.
Short dietary assessment tool reliability studies among preschoolers (2–5 years).
| Reference details; tool length; readministration period; sample size | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | Lanfer et al. (2011) [ | Ebenegger et al. (2010) [ | Huybrechts et al. (2009) [ | Huybrechts et al. (2006) [ |
Randall Simpson et al. (2008) [ |
| Mean/median differences (foods) | — | — | Mean intakes 12/13 food groups within ±10%, 1/13 >10% (11%). Intakes generally lower first administration. | — | — |
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| Paired | — | — | — |
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| Pearson's correlation | — | — | — |
| — |
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| Spearman's correlation (foods) |
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| — | — |
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| ICC | — | 0.59 (>0.50 28/39 foods) | 0.59 (>0.50 13/13 foods) | — | — |
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| Kappa statistic | 0.48 (0.23–0.68) | — | — | 0.60 (95% CI 0.49–0.71) | 0.54 (0.39–0.71) |
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| Wilcoxon signed-rank test: |
| — | NS for 13/13 foods | ||
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| Cross classification | — | — | — | Grossly misclassified = 0%, | — |
Abbreviations: Ca, calcium, NS, not significant.
Studies examining diet quality indices among infants and toddlers (birth-24 months) and preschoolers (2–5 years), details of the content of the indices and their applicability to short dietary assessment tools identified in Table 1.
| Index name; reference details; age of sample | Index properties | Applicability to short tools identified in | Can be applied to dietary data assessed by short tools reviewed ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of components: component labels | Assesses | Requires | |||||
| Five “core” food groups | “Noncore” foods | Assessment of food-group subcategories | Detailed nutrient analysis | Portion size quantificationa | |||
| Infants and toddlers (birth-24 months) | |||||||
| Mean Adequacy Ratio (MAR); Hoerr et al. 2006 [ | Nutrients included in ratio score vary according to research interests. 8 key nutrients used in [ | — | — | — |
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| N |
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| Dietary Diversity Score, international; Dewey et al. 2006 [ | 8 or 9 food groups: cereals, roots and tubers, vitamin A-rich fruit and vegetables, other fruit and vegetables, legumes and nuts, meat and alternatives, fats and oils, dairy, and eggs, (fruits and vegetables separate for 9-food group DDS) |
| — |
| — | — | N |
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| Healthy Eating Index-Canada (HEI-C); Glanville and McIntyre 2006 [ | 9: grains, fruit and vegetables, milk, meat, other foods (high in fat, sodium, and sat fat), total fat, saturated fat, cholesterol, and variety |
|
| — |
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| N |
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| Food Variety Score (FVS), South Africa; Steyn et al. 2006 [ | 1: dietary diversity. One point for every food item consumed over 24-hour period from 45-item listb. | — | — | — | — | — | N |
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| Diet Quality Score 2 (DQS2), USA; Caliendo et al. 1977 [ | 6: vegetables, fruit, breads and cereals, meat and milk, citrus fruit, dark green, and yellow vegetables |
| — |
| — |
| N |
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| Child Feeding Index; Ruel et al. 2002 [ | 7: breastfeeding, does not use bottlec, dietary diversity, food frequency, (egg/fish/poultry), food frequency (meat), food, frequency (grains/tubers), and meal frequency | — | — | — | — | — | N |
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| Nutrient Adequacy Score; Krebs-Smith and Clark 1989 [ | 12: milk and milk products, whole grains, enriched grains, total grains, citrus fruit, other fruit and vegetables, total fruit, green and yellow vegetables, starchy vegetables, other vegetables, total vegetables, and meat and alternatives |
| — |
| — |
| N |
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| Preschoolers (2–5 years) | |||||||
| Crombie et al. 2009 [ | vegetables; dairy products; meat, fish or alternatives; high-fat or high-sugar snacks |
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| — | — |
| Y [ |
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| Nutrient Quality Index (NQI), Germany; Libuda et al. 2009 [ | 17: nutrients: vitamins A, E, K, B6, B12, and C, thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, pantothenic acid, folate; minerals calcium, magnesium, iron, phosphorus, potassium, and zinc | — | — | — |
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| N |
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| Healthy Eating Index (HEI), USA; Manios et al. 2009 [ | 10: Grains, vegetables, fruits, milk, meat, total fat (% calories), saturated fat (% calories), total, cholesterol, sodium, and variety |
| — | — |
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| N |
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| Servings/day, USA; Kranz et al. 2009 [ | 5: fruit, vegetables, grains, milk/dairy, meat/alternatives |
| — | — | — |
| Y [ |
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| HEI-2005, USA; Fungwe et al. 2009 [ | 12: whole fruit (not juice), total vegetables, dark green and orange vegetables and legumes, total and alternatives and beans, food oils, saturated fat, sodium, extra calories from solid fats (including fat in milk), and added sugars |
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| N |
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| Healthy Nutrition score (HuSKY); Kleiser et al. 2009 [ | 11: beverages, vegetables, fruit, fish, breads and dairy products, eggs, meat and sausage, fats and oils (butter/margarine), sweets and fatty snacks, and soft drinks |
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| — | — |
| Y [ |
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| Revised Children's Diet | 13: added sugar, total fat, fat quality—linoleic, fat docosahexaenoic, total grains, whole grains, vegetables, fruits, 100% fruit juice, dairy, iron intake, and energy balance | — |
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| N |
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| Dietary Diversity Score; Sullivan et al. 2006 [ | Dietary diversity. |
| — |
| — | — | Y [ |
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| Diet Quality Index for Children; Kranz et al. 2004 [ | 8: % total energy as added sugars, total fat, saturated fat, number of servings of grains, fruit and vegetables, dairy, excessive juice, and iron (mg/d) | — | — | — |
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| N |
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| (VIT); Cox et al. 1997 [ | Group, meat group |
| — | — | — |
| Y [ |
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| Diet Quality Score 1 (DQS1), Canada; Campbell and Sanjur 1992 [ | 6: milk, meat and alternatives, fruit and vegetables, breads and cereals, additional vegetables, and vitamin A-rich vegetables |
| — |
| — |
| N |
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| Diversity Score (DS), USA; Caliendo et al. 1977 [ | 1: dietary diversity using items consumed by 20% or more of the study samples. One point for every food item consumed from a list of 20 food itemsb | — | — | — | — |
| N |
Table adapted from Smithers et al. 2011 [9].
Freq: frequency; FFQ: food frequency questionnaire; N: no; Y: yes.
Core foods: foods recommended to be consumed daily for example: fruit, vegetables, dairy, meat and alternatives, and cereals [6, 15].
Noncore foods: foods recommended to be consumed in minimal amounts for example: high fat, salt, and/or sugar foods [6, 15].
aIf portion size-quantification required, index is only useful for data collected using semiquantitative or quantitative methods.
bUnlikely any short tool assess the same x-items.
cNo tool assess bottle use.