Evaluation of tools used to measure calcium and/or dairy consumption in adults
Autor: | Kylie Markow, Alison Yaxley, Anthea Magarey, Lauren Baulderstone, Michelle Miller |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Measure (data warehouse) Nutrition and Dietetics Dietary assessment Computer science Australia Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Medicine (miscellaneous) Review Article Validation Studies as Topic Nutrition Surveys Diet Nutrition Policy Calcium Dietary Europe Nutrition Assessment Diet Western Environmental health North America Inclusion and exclusion criteria Humans Patient Compliance Dairy Products Reliability (statistics) |
Zdroj: | Public Health Nutr |
ISSN: | 1475-2727 1368-9800 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s1368980014001633 |
Popis: | ObjectiveTo identify and critique tools for the assessment of Ca and/or dairy intake in adults, in order to ascertain the most accurate and reliable tools available.DesignA systematic review of the literature was conducted using defined inclusion and exclusion criteria. Articles reporting on originally developed tools or testing the reliability or validity of existing tools that measure Ca and/or dairy intake in adults were included. Author-defined criteria for reporting reliability and validity properties were applied.SettingStudies conducted in Western countries.SubjectsAdults.ResultsThirty papers, utilising thirty-six tools assessing intake of dairy, Ca or both, were identified. Reliability testing was conducted on only two dairy and five Ca tools, with results indicating that only one dairy and two Ca tools were reliable. Validity testing was conducted for all but four Ca-only tools. There was high reliance in validity testing on lower-order tests such as correlation and failure to differentiate between statistical and clinically meaningful differences. Results of the validity testing suggest one dairy and five Ca tools are valid. Thus one tool was considered both reliable and valid for the assessment of dairy intake and only two tools proved reliable and valid for the assessment of Ca intake.ConclusionsWhile several tools are reliable and valid, their application across adult populations is limited by the populations in which they were tested. These results indicate a need for tools that assess Ca and/or dairy intake in adults to be rigorously tested for reliability and validity. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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