Validación de un cuestionario de frecuencia de consumo alimentario corto: Reproducibilidad y validez

ISSN: 02121611
160Citations
Citations of this article
299Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Background: Knowledge on dietary intake in individuals is an essential tool to know the dietary patterns and explore their association with the disease risk. One of the current methods most currently used are dietary intake questionnaires. The main drawback of their use is the need for previous validation. Our objective was to validate a short questionnaire on the frequency of dietary intake. Setting: Reus (Catalonia), Spain. Subjects: 71 adolescents and adults from both genders, with different socio-cultural levels and professional categories. Interventions: The questionnaire was administered two times within an approximated period of one year to assess the reproducibility. Through this time, 9 24-hour recalls (gold standard method) were administered to determine the validity. Results: Spearman's correlation coefficients for the reproducibility analysis varied 0.49-0.75 for foods and 0.44-0.78 for energy and nutrients. Most of intra-class correlation coefficients varied 0.53-0.96 for foods and 0.49-0.78 for energy and nutrients. In the validity analysis, the correlations varied 0.27-0.59 for foods, and 0.30-0.49 for energy and nutrients. The correlation coefficients in the validity study varied 0.41-0.67 for foods, and 0.29-0.47 for energy and nutrients. Conclusion: The questionnaire allows assessing the consumption of groups of foods, energy and macronutrients with adequate reproducibility and validity.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Trinidad Rodríguez, I., Fernández Ballart, J., Cucó Pastor, G., Biarnés Jordà, E., & Arija Val, V. (2008). Validación de un cuestionario de frecuencia de consumo alimentario corto: Reproducibilidad y validez. Nutricion Hospitalaria, 23(3), 242–252.

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free