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Dietary intake data: usefulness and limitations.

A G Roberge, J Sevigny, N Seoane

    Progress in Food & Nutrition Science
    |January 1, 1984
    PubMed
    Summary
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    Nutrition surveys are evolving from static snapshots to ongoing evaluations. This paper explores dietary data collection methods and their integration with other fields for a holistic view of nutritional status and quality of life.

    Area of Science:

    • Nutrition science
    • Public health
    • Dietary assessment

    Background:

    • Historically, nutrition surveys focused on cross-sectional nutritional status and dietary patterns.
    • Current trends emphasize the need for continuous evaluation of population nutritional status.
    • Recognizing nutrition as integral to quality of life and interdisciplinary collaboration is crucial.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To discuss the utility and limitations of dietary intake data.
    • To highlight the importance of integrating nutrition with medicine, biochemistry, immunology, anthropometry, and agribusiness.
    • To explore new directions and tools for future dietary intake studies.

    Main Methods:

    • Review of methodologies for dietary data collection.
    • Analysis of diverse applications of dietary data at individual, community, and population levels.

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  • Exploration of interdisciplinary integration strategies.
  • Main Results:

    • Dietary data collection methods have limitations but are essential for understanding nutritional status.
    • Integrating nutrition with other scientific disciplines enhances the scope and impact of nutritional research.
    • New approaches and tools are needed for more comprehensive dietary intake studies.

    Conclusions:

    • Ongoing evaluation of nutritional status is vital.
    • Interdisciplinary approaches strengthen the role of nutrition in public health and quality of life.
    • Future dietary studies should adopt innovative methodologies and integrated frameworks.