Validity of an FFQ to measure nutrient and food intakes in Tanzania

Author:

Zack Rachel MORCID,Irema Kahema,Kazonda Patrick,Leyna Germana H,Liu Enju,Gilbert Susan,Lukmanji Zohra,Spiegelman Donna,Fawzi Wafaie,Njelekela Marina,Killewo Japhet,Danaei Goodarz

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveFFQ are often used to estimate food and nutrient intakes to rank individuals by their level of intake. We evaluated the relative validity of a semi-quantitative FFQ created for use in Tanzania by comparing it with two 24 h diet recalls.DesignWe measured relative validity of the FFQ with deattenuated energy-adjusted rank correlations for nutrients, deattenuated rank correlations for food groups, and performed a cross-classification analysis of energy-adjusted nutrient quartiles using percentage of agreement and Bland–Altman analysis.SettingInterviews were conducted in 2014 in participants’ homes in Ukonga, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.SubjectsWe surveyed 317 adults aged 40 years or older from the general public.ResultsDeattenuated energy-adjusted rank correlation coefficients of nutrients ranged from −0·03 for riboflavin to 0·41 for percentage of energy from carbohydrates, with a median correlation of 0·21. Coefficients for food groups ranged from 0·00 for root vegetables to 0·51 for alcohol, with a median of 0·35. Relative to the average of the two 24 h diet recalls, the FFQ overestimated energy intake and intakes of all nutrients and food groups, other than tea, with ratios among nutrients ranging from 1·34 for SFA to 7·08 for vitamin A; and among food groups from 0·92 for tea to 9·00 for fruit. The percentage of participants classified into the same nutrient intake quartile ranged from 23 % for SFA to 32 % for both niacin and pantothenic acid, with a median of 28 %.ConclusionsThe FFQ performed moderately well in urban Tanzanian adults.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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