| Literature DB >> 29686860 |
B Amoutzopoulos1, T Steer1, C Roberts2, J E Cade3, C J Boushey4, C E Collins5, E Trolle6, E J de Boer7, N Ziauddeen1, C van Rossum7, E Buurma7, D Coyle5, P Page1.
Abstract
The aim of the present paper is to summarise current and future applications of dietary assessment technologies in nutrition surveys in developed countries. It includes the discussion of key points and highlights of subsequent developments from a panel discussion to address strengths and weaknesses of traditional dietary assessment methods (food records, FFQ, 24 h recalls, diet history with interviewer-assisted data collection) v. new technology-based dietary assessment methods (web-based and mobile device applications). The panel discussion 'Traditional methods v. new technologies: dilemmas for dietary assessment in population surveys', was held at the 9th International Conference on Diet and Activity Methods (ICDAM9), Brisbane, September 2015. Despite respondent and researcher burden, traditional methods have been most commonly used in nutrition surveys. However, dietary assessment technologies offer potential advantages including faster data processing and better data quality. This is a fast-moving field and there is evidence of increasing demand for the use of new technologies amongst the general public and researchers. There is a need for research and investment to support efforts being made to facilitate the inclusion of new technologies for rapid, accurate and representative data.Entities:
Keywords: AES, Australian Eating Survey; AHS, Australian Health Survey; AMPM, Automated Multiple-Pass Method; ASA24, Automated Self-Administered 24-hour Recall; DNFCS, Dutch National Food Consumption Survey; Dietary assessment technologies; ICDAM9, 9th International Conference on Diet and Activity Methods; MRC, Medical Research Council; Mobile applications; NDNS, National Diet and Nutrition Survey; NHANES, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; Nutrition surveys; RP, Rolling Programme; Web-based tools; WebDASC, Web-based Dietary Assessment Software for Children; mFR, mobile food record
Year: 2018 PMID: 29686860 PMCID: PMC5906559 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2018.4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Different levels of application of new technology to dietary assessment from minimal to more extensive
| Technology application | Examples |
|---|---|
| Researcher-assisted dietary assessment tools administered via computerised systems: | Computer-assisted personal interviews/computer-assisted telephone interview (CAPI/CATI)( |
| Self-administered dietary assessment tools administered via web-based systems/mobile applications: | Web-based Dietary Assessment Software for Children (WebDASC), self-administered web-based 24 h dietary assessment tool( |
| Automated image-based dietary assessment tools administered via mobile applications/servers: | Mobile food record (mFR), an integrated dietary assessment system supporting automatic image analysis( |
Advantages and challenges of current dietary assessment methods used in nutrition surveys and the potential use of new technologies as presented at the 9th International Conference on Diet and Activity Methods (ICDAM9) Panel 2015
| Survey, country | Dietary assessment method | Advantages of the current method | Challenges of the current method | Potential benefits of new technologies |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australian Health Survey 2011–13 (AHS), Australia | Two 24 h recalls including interviewer-assisted data collection via computerised Automated Multiple-Pass Method (AMPM) | Provides detailed intake data (additional information collected including supplement use and dietary behaviours); ease of application among those with low literacy and older adults | Expensive and time consuming; possible recall bias; trained interviewer required; respondent burden | Online FFQ – the Australian Eating Survey (AES): |
| Danish National Survey of Diet and Physical Activity (DANSDA), Denmark | Paper 7-d estimated pre-coded diary with open-answer possibilities and pre-coded answer options for the most commonly eaten foods and dishes in the Danish diet | Ease of application among those with low technology usage and older adults; ease of coding process due to precoding | Expensive and time consuming; trained interviewer required; respondent burden; slow data processing and reporting timeline; generic-level food intake information | Web-based 7-d food record (6–36 months old, 2014–2015): |
| The Dutch National Food Consumption Survey (DNFCS), the Netherlands | Two 24 h recalls using computerised GloboDiet with trained interviewers | Provides detailed intake data (provides additional information including supplement use) | Expensive and time consuming; possible recall bias; trained interviewer required; respondent burden; slow data processing and reporting timeline; difficulty to keep up-to-date food composition database; low respondent motivation (method perceived as ‘old-fashioned’) | Barcoding technology (in combination with GloboDiet): |
| National Diet and Nutrition Survey Rolling Programme (NDNS RP), UK | Paper 4-d estimated food diary | Provides detailed intake data (provides additional information on supplement use); ease of application among those with low technology usage and older adults; provides contextual eating information | Expensive and time consuming; trained interviewer required; large respondent burden (high motivation required); slow data processing and reporting timeline | Web-based 24 h recall: |