Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender

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Standard

Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender. / Lyng, Nina; Fagt, Sisse; Davidsen, Michael; Hoppe, Camilla; Holstein, Bjørn Evald; Tetens, Inge.

I: Food & Nutrition Research, Bind 57, 19621, 2013.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Lyng, N, Fagt, S, Davidsen, M, Hoppe, C, Holstein, BE & Tetens, I 2013, 'Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender', Food & Nutrition Research, bind 57, 19621. https://doi.org/10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19621

APA

Lyng, N., Fagt, S., Davidsen, M., Hoppe, C., Holstein, B. E., & Tetens, I. (2013). Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender. Food & Nutrition Research, 57, [19621]. https://doi.org/10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19621

Vancouver

Lyng N, Fagt S, Davidsen M, Hoppe C, Holstein BE, Tetens I. Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender. Food & Nutrition Research. 2013;57. 19621. https://doi.org/10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19621

Author

Lyng, Nina ; Fagt, Sisse ; Davidsen, Michael ; Hoppe, Camilla ; Holstein, Bjørn Evald ; Tetens, Inge. / Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender. I: Food & Nutrition Research. 2013 ; Bind 57.

Bibtex

@article{ab8ed72c09294c0788c475fcb6c63297,
title = "Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Packed lunch is the dominant lunch format in many countries including Denmark. School lunch is consumed unsupervised, and self-reported recalls are appropriate in the school setting. However, little is known about the accuracy of recalls in relation to packed lunch.OBJECTIVE: To assess the qualitative recall accuracy of self-reported consumption of packed lunch among Danish 11-year-old children in relation to gender and dietary assessment method.DESIGN: A cross-sectional dietary recall study of packed lunch consumption. Digital images (DIs) served as an objective reference method to determine food items consumed. Recalls were collected with a lunch recall questionnaire (LRQ) comprising an open-ended recall (OE-Q) and a pre-coded food group prompted recall (PC-Q). Individual interviews (INTs) were conducted successively. The number of food items was identified and accuracy was calculated as match rates (% identified by DIs and reported correctly) and intrusion rates (% not identified by DIs but reported) were determined.SETTING AND SUBJECTS: Three Danish public schools from Copenhagen. A total of 114 Danish 11-year-old children, mean (SE) age=11.1 (0.03), and body mass index=18.2 (0.26).RESULTS: The reference (DIs) showed that girls consumed a higher number of food items than boys [mean (SE) 5.4 (0.25) vs. 4.6 (0.29) items (p=0.05)]. The number of food items recalled differed between genders with OE-Q recalls (p=0.005) only. Girls' interview recalls were more accurate than boys' with higher match rates (p=0.04) and lower intrusion rates (p=0.05). Match rates ranged from 67-90% and intrusion rates ranged from 13-39% with little differences between girls and boys using the OE-Q and PC-Q methods.CONCLUSION: Dietary recall validation studies should not only consider match rates as an account of accuracy. Intrusions contribute to over-reporting in non-validation studies, and future studies should address recall accuracy and inaccuracies in relation to gender and recall method.",
keywords = "School lunch, Self-reported intake, recall accuracy",
author = "Nina Lyng and Sisse Fagt and Michael Davidsen and Camilla Hoppe and Holstein, {Bj{\o}rn Evald} and Inge Tetens",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19621",
language = "English",
volume = "57",
journal = "Scandinavian Journal of Nutrition/Naringsforskning, Supplement",
issn = "1102-6510",
publisher = "Co-Action Publishing",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Reporting accuracy of packed lunch consumption among Danish 11-year-olds differ by gender

AU - Lyng, Nina

AU - Fagt, Sisse

AU - Davidsen, Michael

AU - Hoppe, Camilla

AU - Holstein, Bjørn Evald

AU - Tetens, Inge

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - BACKGROUND: Packed lunch is the dominant lunch format in many countries including Denmark. School lunch is consumed unsupervised, and self-reported recalls are appropriate in the school setting. However, little is known about the accuracy of recalls in relation to packed lunch.OBJECTIVE: To assess the qualitative recall accuracy of self-reported consumption of packed lunch among Danish 11-year-old children in relation to gender and dietary assessment method.DESIGN: A cross-sectional dietary recall study of packed lunch consumption. Digital images (DIs) served as an objective reference method to determine food items consumed. Recalls were collected with a lunch recall questionnaire (LRQ) comprising an open-ended recall (OE-Q) and a pre-coded food group prompted recall (PC-Q). Individual interviews (INTs) were conducted successively. The number of food items was identified and accuracy was calculated as match rates (% identified by DIs and reported correctly) and intrusion rates (% not identified by DIs but reported) were determined.SETTING AND SUBJECTS: Three Danish public schools from Copenhagen. A total of 114 Danish 11-year-old children, mean (SE) age=11.1 (0.03), and body mass index=18.2 (0.26).RESULTS: The reference (DIs) showed that girls consumed a higher number of food items than boys [mean (SE) 5.4 (0.25) vs. 4.6 (0.29) items (p=0.05)]. The number of food items recalled differed between genders with OE-Q recalls (p=0.005) only. Girls' interview recalls were more accurate than boys' with higher match rates (p=0.04) and lower intrusion rates (p=0.05). Match rates ranged from 67-90% and intrusion rates ranged from 13-39% with little differences between girls and boys using the OE-Q and PC-Q methods.CONCLUSION: Dietary recall validation studies should not only consider match rates as an account of accuracy. Intrusions contribute to over-reporting in non-validation studies, and future studies should address recall accuracy and inaccuracies in relation to gender and recall method.

AB - BACKGROUND: Packed lunch is the dominant lunch format in many countries including Denmark. School lunch is consumed unsupervised, and self-reported recalls are appropriate in the school setting. However, little is known about the accuracy of recalls in relation to packed lunch.OBJECTIVE: To assess the qualitative recall accuracy of self-reported consumption of packed lunch among Danish 11-year-old children in relation to gender and dietary assessment method.DESIGN: A cross-sectional dietary recall study of packed lunch consumption. Digital images (DIs) served as an objective reference method to determine food items consumed. Recalls were collected with a lunch recall questionnaire (LRQ) comprising an open-ended recall (OE-Q) and a pre-coded food group prompted recall (PC-Q). Individual interviews (INTs) were conducted successively. The number of food items was identified and accuracy was calculated as match rates (% identified by DIs and reported correctly) and intrusion rates (% not identified by DIs but reported) were determined.SETTING AND SUBJECTS: Three Danish public schools from Copenhagen. A total of 114 Danish 11-year-old children, mean (SE) age=11.1 (0.03), and body mass index=18.2 (0.26).RESULTS: The reference (DIs) showed that girls consumed a higher number of food items than boys [mean (SE) 5.4 (0.25) vs. 4.6 (0.29) items (p=0.05)]. The number of food items recalled differed between genders with OE-Q recalls (p=0.005) only. Girls' interview recalls were more accurate than boys' with higher match rates (p=0.04) and lower intrusion rates (p=0.05). Match rates ranged from 67-90% and intrusion rates ranged from 13-39% with little differences between girls and boys using the OE-Q and PC-Q methods.CONCLUSION: Dietary recall validation studies should not only consider match rates as an account of accuracy. Intrusions contribute to over-reporting in non-validation studies, and future studies should address recall accuracy and inaccuracies in relation to gender and recall method.

KW - School lunch

KW - Self-reported intake

KW - recall accuracy

U2 - 10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19621

DO - 10.3402/fnr.v57i0.19621

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 23483301

VL - 57

JO - Scandinavian Journal of Nutrition/Naringsforskning, Supplement

JF - Scandinavian Journal of Nutrition/Naringsforskning, Supplement

SN - 1102-6510

M1 - 19621

ER -

ID: 184200569