| Literature DB >> 26189886 |
Anja Biltoft-Jensen1, Camilla Trab Damsgaard2, Rikke Andersen1, Karin Hess Ygil1, Elisabeth Wreford Andersen3, Majken Ege1, Tue Christensen1, Louise Bergmann Sørensen2, Ken D Stark4, Inge Tetens1, Anne-Vibeke Thorsen1.
Abstract
Bias in self-reported dietary intake is important when evaluating the effect of dietary interventions, particularly for intervention foods. However, few have investigated this in children, and none have investigated the reporting accuracy of fish intake in children using biomarkers. In a Danish school meal study, 8- to 11-year-old children (n 834) were served the New Nordic Diet (NND) for lunch. The present study examined the accuracy of self-reported intake of signature foods (berries, cabbage, root vegetables, legumes, herbs, potatoes, wild plants, mushrooms, nuts and fish) characterising the NND. Children, assisted by parents, self-reported their diet in a Web-based Dietary Assessment Software for Children during the intervention and control (packed lunch) periods. The reported fish intake by children was compared with their ranking according to fasting whole-blood EPA and DHA concentration and weight percentage using the Spearman correlations and cross-classification. Direct observation of school lunch intake (n 193) was used to score the accuracy of food-reporting as matches, intrusions, omissions and faults. The reporting of all lunch foods had higher percentage of matches compared with the reporting of signature foods in both periods, and the accuracy was higher during the control period compared with the intervention period. Both Spearman's rank correlations and linear mixed models demonstrated positive associations between EPA+DHA and reported fish intake. The direct observations showed that both reported and real intake of signature foods did increase during the intervention period. In conclusion, the self-reported data represented a true increase in the intake of signature foods and can be used to examine dietary intervention effects.Entities:
Keywords: Direct observation; Faults; Intrusions; Matches; Omissions; Web-based food diaries; n-3 Fatty acids
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26189886 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114515002020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718