Predicting percentage of individuals consuming foods from percentage of households purchasing foods to improve the use of household budget surveys in estimating food chemical intakes
article
Objective: To examine the hypothesis that there is sufficient agreement between percentage of households purchasing selected foods using household budget surveys and percentage of individuals consuming these foods as determined in individual-based surveys to allow the former to act as a surrogate for the latter when estimating food chemical intakes using household budget data. Design: Database study. Setting: Databases from Sweden, The Netherlands, Ireland and the UK. Subjects: 319 foods (Sweden n = 60, The Netherlands n= 80, Ireland n=90, UK n=89). Results: Pearson correlations demonstrated a high degree of linear association between % households purchasing and % consumers (r=0.86). Regression analysis defined a close positive relationship between the two datasets (slope 0.95, intercept +2.74). Across countries, using the regression equation, the % households predicted % consumers to within 5% of the true value for between 33 and 48% of foods and to within 10% for between 53 and 78% of foods. Conclusions: Values for % households can be used as a crude surrogate for % consumers and can thus play a role in improving estimates of food additive intake.
Topics
Food chemical intake estimationHousehold budget surveysFood additiveAdultBudgetChildClassificationComparative studyDietEconomicsEuropeFactual databaseFoodFood analysisHumanMethodologyPrediction and forecastingRegression analysisReviewAdultBudgetsChildDatabases, FactualDiet SurveysEuropeFoodFood AdditivesFood AnalysisHumansPredictive Value of TestsRegression Analysis
TNO Identifier
234721
ISSN
13689800
Source
Public Health Nutrition, 1(4), pp. 239-247.
Pages
239-247
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