Title of article :
Impact of season of food frequency questionnaire administration on dietary reporting
Author/Authors :
Jay H. Fowke، نويسنده , , David Schlundt، نويسنده , , Yang Gong، نويسنده , , Fan Jin، نويسنده , , Xiao-Ou Shu، نويسنده , , Wanqing Wen، نويسنده , , Da-ke Liu، نويسنده , , Yu-Tang Gao، نويسنده , , Wei Zheng، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
8
From page :
778
To page :
785
Abstract :
Purpose Foods consumed near the time of food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) administration may prime the memory, such that FFQ responses emphasize recently consumed foods. This study investigates the effect of season of FFQ administration, a proxy for the recent diet, on FFQ responses. Methods FFQ data from 74,958 Shanghai Womenʹs Health Study (SWHS) subjects were compared with FFQ data from these subjects by season of FFQ administration (i.e., winter, spring, summer, and fall). All analyses were adjusted for age, BMI, and energy intake. Furthermore, quintile categories derived from all study subjects were compared with categories derived from the distribution of subjects recruited in the same season. Results Compared with the study group as a whole, subjects completing the FFQ in winter reported higher intakes of meat (2.1%), vegetable (3.9%), fish (3.1%), and soy foods (4.1%), but lower fruit (− 3.9%) intake. Subjects completing the FFQ in summer reported lower than average meat (− 2.0%), vegetable (− 3.2%), fish (− 2.3%), and soy food (− 4.6%) intakes, but greater fruit intake (0.9%). Completion of the FFQ in spring and fall usually led to intermediate differences from the group average, although fruit intake was 5.9% higher among subjects completing the FFQ in the fall. Variations across macronutrients and micronutrients by season of FFQ administration were smaller. If seasonal FFQ reporting is ignored, up to 13% of subjects would be classified to a different diet intake exposure category. However, reclassification was always to an adjacent category. Conclusions FFQ responses varied with season of FFQ administration, consistent with theory that current diet intake influences reporting of habitual past diet intake. However, season of FFQ administration did not alter dietary exposure category assignments sufficiently to effect interpretation of most epidemiologic studies.
Keywords :
Bias , Memory retrieval , China. , food frequency questionnaire , Diet Assessment , Memory Recall
Journal title :
Annals of Epidemiology
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Annals of Epidemiology
Record number :
462475
Link To Document :
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