| Literature DB >> 27326891 |
Joan Gandy1, Laurent Le Bellego2, Jürgen König3, Ana Piekarz4, Gabriel Tavoularis5, David R Tennant6.
Abstract
The European Food Safety Authority's 2010 scientific opinion on dietary reference values for total water intakes was partly based on observed intakes in population groups. Large variability was observed, and it is unlikely that these differences can be explained by differences in climate, activity level and/or culture. This suggests that there are uncertainties in the methodologies used to assess water intake from food and fluids, including all types of beverages. To determine current methods for recording and reporting total water, beverages and fluid intakes, twenty-one European countries were surveyed using an electronic questionnaire. In total, twelve countries responded and ten completed surveys were summarised. Countries reported that their survey was representative of the population in terms of age and socio-economic status. However, a variety of methods were used - that is, repeated 24-h recalls, estimated food diaries and FFQ. None of the methods were validated to assess water and fluid intakes. The methods used to record liquid foods - for example, soup and diluted drinks - were inconsistent. Clarity and consistency on definitions of categories of beverages to facilitate comparisons between countries are needed. Recommendations for a unified approach to surveying and quantifying intake of water from fluids and foods are proposed.Entities:
Keywords: Beverage intake; Dietary assessment methods; EFSA European Food Safety Authority; Fluid intake; Water intake
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27326891 PMCID: PMC4970442 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114516002336
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Characteristics of population diet/nutrition surveys for ten European countries
| Countries | Average population size | Age groups (years) | Timing of survey | Methodology | Method used to estimate volumes | Daily variation considered | Ensure volume consumed (rather than served) is recorded | Water content of foods calculated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Austria(
| 1002 | 7–14 and 18–80 | August–February | 7–14 years – 3 d dietary record, FFQ; 18–80 years – repeated 24-h recall, FFQ | Photographs | No | Yes | Yes |
| Belgium(
| 3200 | 2004: 18–99; 2014: 3–64 | All seasons | Children – food diary | Photographs | No | No | No |
| Czech Republic(
| 2590 | 4–90 | All seasons | Repeated (×2) 24-h recall | Photographs and household measures | No | No | No |
| Germany(
| 19 329 | 14–80 | All seasons | 3 dietary assessment methods applied
separately 2×24 h recalls | Household measurements and standard units (e. g. bottles) | No | No | No |
| Hungary(
| Approximately 5000 | 0–101 | February–June | FFQ | Photographs | No | No | Yes |
| Iceland(
| 2000 | 18–80 | All seasons | Repeated (×2) 24-h recall | Pictures or standard glass 200 ml, standard cup 150 ml | No | Yes | Yes |
| The Netherlands(
| 3819 | Each survey targets a defined population for example 2007–2010: 7–69 years | All seasons | Repeated (×2) 24-h recall | Choice of – photographs, household measures, weight, volume or standard units | No | Yes | Yes |
| Republic of Ireland(
| 500 | Each survey targets a defined population for example 2005–2006: 13–17 years; 2008–2010: 18–90 years | All seasons | 4 d weighed food diary | Weighed intake Otherwise photographs or household measures | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Sweden(
| 1200 | 18–74 years | All seasons | 7 d estimated food diary | No response | Yes | No | No |
| UK(
| 6828 1–4 years Every year the study aims to recruit 1000 core participants 500 adults and 500 children | 18 months upwards | All seasons – rolling programme | 4 d estimated food diary | Respondents are given an image of a glass and examples of volume sizes in a table. Usual cup/mug volume measured | Yes | Yes | No |
Electronic versions used.