扩展和评估基于网络的24小时饮食回忆工具,Foodbook24,用于生活在爱尔兰的不同人群:比较分析。

Grace Bennett, Shuhua Yang, Laura A Bardon, Claire M Timon, Eileen R Gibney
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:目前,爱尔兰用于收集膳食摄入量数据的方法对某些人群的需求缺乏灵活性,因此,这些人群在营养和健康数据中的代表性不足。随着爱尔兰人口日益多样化,迫切需要了解爱尔兰多个人口亚群,包括不同国籍和少数民族的习惯性食物摄入和饮食质量。Foodbook24是一个现有的基于网络的24小时饮食回忆工具,此前已被验证可用于普通爱尔兰成年人。由于其设计,Foodbook24可以促进爱尔兰膳食摄入评估的改进。目的:我们的目的是检查扩展Foodbook24工具的适用性,提高在爱尔兰主要民族中收集的膳食摄入数据的可靠性和准确性。方法:本研究包括三个不同的部分:(1)扩展Foodbook24,(2)测试其可用性(即可接受性研究),以及(3)检查更新后的Foodbook24工具的准确性(即比较研究)。为了扩大Foodbook24,对巴西和波兰的全国调查数据进行了审查,并将常见的食品添加到食品列表中。所有的食物都被翻译成波兰语和葡萄牙语。可接受性研究采用了定性方法,参与者提供了他们习惯性饮食的视觉记录。比较研究包括使用Foodbook24进行的一次24小时饮食回忆,以及在同一天完成的一次由访谈者主导的回忆,两周后再次重复。比较研究数据采用Spearman秩相关、Mann-Whitney U检验和κ系数进行分析。结果:Foodbook24食物列表的扩展导致了546种额外的食物。可接受性研究报告,参与者列出的86.5%(302/349)的食品在更新的食品清单中可用。从比较研究中,确定了8种食物组(占18种食物组的44%)和15种营养素(占26种营养素的58%)之间的强正相关(r=0.70-0.99)。在不同的评估方法中,只有土豆和土豆菜、坚果、草药和种子的摄入量有显著差异,这些食物组之间的相关性很低(r=0.56和r=0.47)。食物遗漏的发生率因样本而异,巴西参与者在自我管理召回中遗漏的食物比例高于其他样本(巴西参与者为6/ 25,24%,爱尔兰参与者为5/ 38,13%)。结论:更新后的食物清单代表了巴西、爱尔兰和波兰成年人在爱尔兰消费的大多数食物。Foodbook24中报告的膳食摄入量数据与通过传统方法报告的食物组和营养素摄入量没有太大差异。这项研究表明,Foodbook24可能适用于未来调查爱尔兰巴西人、爱尔兰人和波兰人饮食摄入量的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Expansion and Assessment of a Web-Based 24-Hour Dietary Recall Tool, Foodbook24, for Use Among Diverse Populations Living in Ireland: Comparative Analysis.

Background: Currently, the methods used to collect dietary intake data in Ireland are inflexible to the needs of certain populations, who are poorly represented in nutrition and health data as a result. As the Irish population is becoming increasingly diverse, there is an urgent need to understand the habitual food intake and diet quality of multiple population subgroups, including different nationalities and ethnic minorities, in Ireland. Foodbook24 is an existing web-based 24-hour dietary recall tool, which has previously been validated for use within the general Irish adult population. Because of its design, Foodbook24 can facilitate the improved inclusion of dietary intake assessment in Ireland.

Objective: We aimed to examine the suitability of expanding the Foodbook24 tool, improving the reliability and accuracy of dietary intake data collected among prominent nationalities in Ireland.

Methods: This study consisted of three distinct parts: (1) expansion of Foodbook24, (2) testing its usability (ie, acceptability study), and (3) examining the accuracy (ie, comparison study) of the updated Foodbook24 tool. To expand Foodbook24, national survey data from Brazil and Poland were reviewed and commonly consumed food items were added to the food list. All foods were translated into Polish and Portuguese. The acceptability study used a qualitative approach whereby participants provided a visual record of their habitual diet. The comparison study consisted of one 24-hour dietary recall using Foodbook24 and one interviewer-led recall completed on the same day, repeated again 2 weeks later. Comparison study data were analyzed using Spearman rank correlations, Mann-Whitney U tests, and κ coefficients.

Results: The expansion of the Foodbook24 food list resulted in 546 additional foods. The acceptability study reported that 86.5% (302/349) of foods listed by participants were available in the updated food list. From the comparison study, strong and positive correlations across 8 food groups (44% of a total of 18 food groups) and 15 nutrients (58% of a total of 26 nutrients) were identified (r=0.70-0.99). Only intakes of potatoes and potato dishes and nuts, herbs, and seeds significantly differed across methods of assessment, where correlations across these food groups were low (r=0.56 and r=0.47, respectively). The incidence of food omissions varied across samples, with Brazilian participants omitting a higher percentage of foods in self-administered recalls than other samples (6/25, 24% among the Brazilian vs 5/38, 13% among the Irish cohort).

Conclusions: The updated food list is representative of most foods consumed by Brazilian, Irish, and Polish adults in Ireland. Dietary intake data reported in Foodbook24 are not largely different from food groups and nutrient intakes reported via traditional methods. This study has demonstrated that Foodbook24 may be appropriate for use in future research investigating the dietary intakes of Brazilian, Irish, and Polish groups in Ireland.

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