Prevalence and determinants of misreporting among European children in proxy-reported 24-hour dietary recalls.
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2012
Abstract:
Dietary assessment is strongly affected by misreporting (both under- and over-reporting), which results in measurement error. Knowledge
about misreporting is essential to correctly interpret potentially biased associations between diet and health outcomes. In young children,
dietary data mainly rely on proxy respondents but little is known about determinants of misreporting here. The present analysis was conducted
within the framework of the multi-centre IDEFICS (Identification and prevention of dietary- and lifestyle-induced health effects
in children and infants) study and is based on 6101 children aged 2-9 years with 24 h dietary recall (24-HDR) and complete covariate
information. Adapted Goldberg cut-offs were applied to classify the 24-HDR as 'over-report', 'plausible report' or 'under-report'. Backward
elimination in the course of multi-level logistic regression analyses was conducted to identify factors significantly related to under- and
over-reporting. Next to characteristics of the children and parents, social factors and parental concerns/perceptions concerning their
child's weight status were considered. Further selective misreporting was addressed, investigating food group intakes commonly perceived
as more or less socially desirable. Proportions of under-, plausible and over-reports were 8·0, 88·6 and 3·4%, respectively. The risk of
under-reporting increased with age (OR 1·19, 95% CI 1·05, 1·83), BMI z-score of the child (OR 1·23, 95% CI 1·10, 1·37) and household
size (OR 1·12, 95% CI 1·01, 1·25), and was higher in low/medium income groups (OR 1·45, 95% CI 1·13, 1·86). Over-reporting was negatively
associated with BMI z-scores of the child (OR 0·78, 95% CI 0·69, 0·88) and higher in girls (OR 1·70, 95% CI 1·27, 2·28). Further social
desirability and parental concerns/perceptions seemed to influence the reporting behaviour. Future studies should involve these determinants
of misreporting when investigating diet-disease relationships in children to correct for the differential reporting bias.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Energy intake; Goldberg cut-off; Parental perceptions; Social desirability
Elenco autori:
Russo, Paola; Barba, Gianvincenzo
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