Applied Filters
- Article
- Shatenstein, Bryna PhD PDtRemove filter
Journal Title
Publication Date
Author
Access Type
1 - 4of4
Save this search
Please login to be able to save your searches and receive alerts for new content matching your search criteria.
Filters
Search Name | Searched On |
---|---|
[Paper Type: Article] AND [Author: Shatenstein, Bryna PhD PDt] (4) | 12 May 2024 |
You do not have any saved searches
- Bryna Shatenstein PhD, PDt,
- Hairong Xu MD, MSc, PhD candidate,
- Zhong-Cheng Luo MB, PhD, and
- William Fraser MD, MSc
Purpose: Pregnant women’s diets should be monitored to ensure adequacy, but few studies have assessed the validity of dietary assessment tools among pregnant women. We examined the relative validity of a self-administered, semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) adapted for use in the International Trial of Antioxidants in the Prevention of Preeclampsia for assessing usual diet during pregnancy. Methods: A subsample (n=107) was recruited for the FFQ validation study, and provided three days of nonconsecutive threeday food records (3D-FRs) following completion of the FFQ. Results: Mean ± standard deviation (median) energy intakes (kcal/kJ) from the FFQ and mean of 3D-FRs were 1963 ± 610 (1860)/8219 ± 2554 (7787) and 2320 ± 607 (2354)/9713 ± 2541 (9856), respectively. Spearman correlation coefficients between unadjusted FFQ and 3D-FRs nutrients were positive (rS ranged from 0.17 for iron to 0.49 for folate) and were generally statistically significant (0.05<p<0.01). Most energy-adjusted correlations were less robust. Cross-classification of energy and 24 nutrients from the FFQ and means of the 3D-FRs placed 35% of them into identical quartiles and 75% into identical and contiguous quartiles; only 6% were frankly misclassified. Bland– Altman plots showed acceptable agreement between the two instruments. Conclusions: These results suggest that the FFQ is a relatively valid instrument for determining usual diet in pregnant women.- To determine whether older Quebecers are eating adequately and whether summary scores represent diet quality, a representative subset of participants aged 55 to 74 (weighted n=460, 47% male) was studied from the 1990 Enquête québécoise sur la nutrition dataset. Participants’ diet quality was scored from adjusted 24-hour recalls. Foods were coded into Canada's Food Guide to Healthy Eating food groups. Usual Dietary Adequacy Score (maximum=18) and Dietary Diversity Score (maximum=4) were calculated from adjusted food guide portions and validated internally in relation to achievement of nutrient recommendations using correlation analysis. Average usual Dietary Adequacy Score (mean ± standard error) was 14.96 ± 0.15 (men) and 13.72 ± 0.15 (women). Only 7% of men and 1% of women achieved the maximum usual score. Fortyfour percent of men and 45% of women scored a usual Dietary Diversity Score of 3, and 55% of men and 50% of women achieved 4. Thus, approximately half of older Quebecers showed inadequate dietary variety, and consumed fewer than the minimum recommended number of servings from certain food groups. Summary diet quality indicators are useful for tracking diet quality, and provide critical data for planning nutrition education programs targeting older persons.
- Bryna Shatenstein PhD, PDt,
- Sylvie Nadon MSc, Dtp,
- Catherine Godin MSc, PDt, and
- Guylaine Ferland PhD
Regular diet monitoring requires a tool validated in the target population. A 73-item, semiquantitative, self-administered food frequency questionnaire (FFQ), was adapted in French and English from the Block National Cancer Institute Health Habits and History Questionnaire. The FFQ was used to capture usual long-term food consumption among adults living in Quebec. A representative sample of adults aged 18 to 82 (57% female) was recruited by random digit dialling in the Montreal region. Approximately 64% of recruits completed and returned the instrument by mail (n=248). The FFQ was validated in a subsample (n=94, 61% female) using four nonconsecutive food records (FRs). Median energy intakes (in kcal) for men and women, respectively, were FFQ (total sample) 2,112 and 1,823, FFQ (subsample) 2,137 and 1,752, and FR (subsample) 2,510 and 1,830. Spearman correlation analyses between FFQ and FR nutrients were positive (with r ranging from 0.32 for folate to 0.58 for saturated fatty acids) and statistically significant (p<0.001), with better results among women. On average, cross-classification of energy and 24 nutrients from the FFQ and means of four FRs placed 39% into identical quartiles and 78% into identical and contiguous quartiles, with only 4% frankly misclassified. These results suggest that the FFQ is a relatively valid instrument for determining usual diet in Quebec adults.- To determine the health and social benefits of the family mealtime, we examined the contribution of immigrant mothers’ food motives to the importance placed on family meals, and cultural differences in mothers’ food motives and the importance ascribed to family meals. Data were taken from a study on food choice factors among ten- to 12-year-old children from three cultural communities in Montreal. A 24-item, self-administered questionnaire was used to explore food choice motives. Each mother was also asked how important it was for her family to take the time to eat together, and if the child enjoyed sharing meals with his or her family. In all, 209 of the 653 questionnaires distributed were valid; 68 were from Haitian, 75 from Portuguese, and 66 from Vietnamese mothers. Five factors emerging from factor analyses explained 61.67% of the variance. Analysis of variance indicated significant differences between mothers’ countries of origin for the importance placed on health, pleasure, familiarity, and ingredient properties (p<0.005). Among Haitian and Portuguese mothers, health motivations emerged as the only significant predictor of the importance given to family meals, whereas for Vietnamese mothers, both health and eating familiar foods were predictors (p<0.05).