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Dietary patterns in pregnant women: a comparison of food-frequency questionnaires and 4 d prospective diaries

Dietary patterns in pregnant women: a comparison of food-frequency questionnaires and 4 d prospective diaries
Dietary patterns in pregnant women: a comparison of food-frequency questionnaires and 4 d prospective diaries
There is growing interest in the use of dietary patterns as measures of exposure in studies of diet-disease relationships. However, relatively little is known about the impact of the type of dietary assessment method on the patterns observed. Using FFQ and food diary data collected from 585 women in early pregnancy we used principal component analysis to define dietary patterns. The first pattern was very similar in both datasets and was termed the 'prudent' diet. The second pattern, whilst comparable for the FFQ and food diaries, showed greater variation in coefficients than the prudent pattern; it was termed the 'Western' diet. Differences between the FFQ and diary scores were calculated for each woman for both the prudent and Western diet patterns. Of the differences in the prudent diet score, 95 % lay within +/- 1.58 sd of the mean, and 95 % of the differences in the Western diet scores lay within +/- 2.22 sd of the mean. Pearson's correlation coefficients were 0.67 (P < 0.001) for the prudent diet score and 0.35 (P < 0.001) for the Western diet score. The agreement between the FFQ and diary scores was lowest amongst respondents who were younger, had lower educational attainment and whose diaries were coded as 'poor, probably incomplete', although these effects were small. The first two dietary patterns identified in this cohort of pregnant women appear to be defined similarly by both FFQ and diary data, suggesting that FFQ data provide useful information on dietary patterns
epidemiology, exposure, food frequency questionnaires, analysis, cohort, diet, sws, pregnancy, questionnaires, women
0007-1145
869-875
Crozier, S.R.
a97b1967-f6af-413a-8eb0-69fa25534d68
Inskip, H.M.
5fb4470a-9379-49b2-a533-9da8e61058b7
Godfrey, K.M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Robinson, S.M.
ba591c98-4380-456a-be8a-c452f992b69b
Crozier, S.R.
a97b1967-f6af-413a-8eb0-69fa25534d68
Inskip, H.M.
5fb4470a-9379-49b2-a533-9da8e61058b7
Godfrey, K.M.
0931701e-fe2c-44b5-8f0d-ec5c7477a6fd
Robinson, S.M.
ba591c98-4380-456a-be8a-c452f992b69b

Crozier, S.R., Inskip, H.M., Godfrey, K.M. and Robinson, S.M. (2008) Dietary patterns in pregnant women: a comparison of food-frequency questionnaires and 4 d prospective diaries. British Journal of Nutrition, 99 (4), 869-875. (doi:10.1017/S0007114507831746).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There is growing interest in the use of dietary patterns as measures of exposure in studies of diet-disease relationships. However, relatively little is known about the impact of the type of dietary assessment method on the patterns observed. Using FFQ and food diary data collected from 585 women in early pregnancy we used principal component analysis to define dietary patterns. The first pattern was very similar in both datasets and was termed the 'prudent' diet. The second pattern, whilst comparable for the FFQ and food diaries, showed greater variation in coefficients than the prudent pattern; it was termed the 'Western' diet. Differences between the FFQ and diary scores were calculated for each woman for both the prudent and Western diet patterns. Of the differences in the prudent diet score, 95 % lay within +/- 1.58 sd of the mean, and 95 % of the differences in the Western diet scores lay within +/- 2.22 sd of the mean. Pearson's correlation coefficients were 0.67 (P < 0.001) for the prudent diet score and 0.35 (P < 0.001) for the Western diet score. The agreement between the FFQ and diary scores was lowest amongst respondents who were younger, had lower educational attainment and whose diaries were coded as 'poor, probably incomplete', although these effects were small. The first two dietary patterns identified in this cohort of pregnant women appear to be defined similarly by both FFQ and diary data, suggesting that FFQ data provide useful information on dietary patterns

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More information

Published date: 2008
Keywords: epidemiology, exposure, food frequency questionnaires, analysis, cohort, diet, sws, pregnancy, questionnaires, women

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 61029
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/61029
ISSN: 0007-1145
PURE UUID: 54422573-d244-469d-bd88-7a37cd64b9a9
ORCID for H.M. Inskip: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8897-1749
ORCID for K.M. Godfrey: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4643-0618
ORCID for S.M. Robinson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1766-7269

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Date deposited: 09 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:55

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Contributors

Author: S.R. Crozier
Author: H.M. Inskip ORCID iD
Author: K.M. Godfrey ORCID iD
Author: S.M. Robinson ORCID iD

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