Literature DB >> 8654326

The Malmö Food Study: the reproducibility of a novel diet history method and an extensive food frequency questionnaire.

S Elmståhl1, B Gullberg, E Riboli, R Saracci, F Lindgärde.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the reproducibility of two diet assessment methods, an extensive quantitative food frequency questionnaire (method A) and a novel shorter quantitative food frequency questionnaire with a 14 day food record (method B).
DESIGN: A randomized prospective cohort study.
SETTING: General community.
SUBJECTS: 241 residents of the town of Malmö, aged between 50-69 years, 126 men and 115 women who completed the methods one year apart.
METHODS: Both diet methods were designed to cover the whole diet and portion sizes were estimated using a booklet with 120 photographs; method A comprised 250 items and method B combined a two-week food record measuring lunch and dinner meals and a shorter 130 item quantitative food frequency questionnaire for average consumption of foods, snacks and beverages during the past year;
RESULTS: The percent difference between estimated energy intake one year apart were for men 10.7% for method A and 0.2% for method B, corresponding values for women 13.7% and 1.1%. Method B showed a good agreement between measurements for energy-providing nutrients, micronutrients and major food groups, i.e. meat products, edible fats, milk, fish, fruits and vegetables with correlation coefficients between 0.70-0.90 for women. The percent difference of average intake of edible fat was about 10%. Average energy-adjusted Pearson's correlation coefficients were of the order of 0.50-0.80 for most nutrients including 14 fatty acids. The correlation for the ratio between polyunsaturated and saturated fatty acids were about 0.70 for men and 0.80 for women;
CONCLUSION: A modified diet history method combining a food record and a food frequency questionnaire shows good reproducibility.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1996        PMID: 8654326

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0954-3007            Impact factor:   4.016


  16 in total

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Authors:  Emily Sonestedt; Sophie Hellstrand; Christina-Alexandra Schulz; Peter Wallström; Isabel Drake; Ulrika Ericson; Bo Gullberg; Bo Hedblad; Marju Orho-Melander
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5.  Diet Quality and Change in Blood Lipids during 16 Years of Follow-up and Their Interaction with Genetic Risk for Dyslipidemia.

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6.  Lifestyle and Dietary Determinants of Serum Apolipoprotein A1 and Apolipoprotein B Concentrations: Cross-Sectional Analyses within a Swedish Cohort of 24,984 Individuals.

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8.  Dietary Data in the Malmö Offspring Study-Reproducibility, Method Comparison and Validation against Objective Biomarkers.

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9.  A prospective Swedish study on body size, body composition, diabetes, and prostate cancer risk.

Authors:  P Wallström; A Bjartell; B Gullberg; H Olsson; E Wirfält
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10.  A high diet quality is associated with lower incidence of cardiovascular events in the Malmö diet and cancer cohort.

Authors:  Joanna Hlebowicz; Isabel Drake; Bo Gullberg; Emily Sonestedt; Peter Wallström; Margaretha Persson; Jan Nilsson; Bo Hedblad; Elisabet Wirfält
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2013-08-05       Impact factor: 3.240

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