6 results on '"J. E. Cade"'
Search Results
2. Taste classification of foods consumed in the National Diet and Nutrition Survey
- Author
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A. O. Bawajeeh, J. E. Cade, M. A. Zulyniak, and C. E. Evans
- Subjects
Taste ,education.field_of_study ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,digestive, oral, and skin physiology ,Population ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Computer-assisted web interviewing ,Umami ,Anthropometry ,Food group ,stomatognathic system ,Environmental health ,Food choice ,Nutrition survey ,education ,Psychology - Abstract
Taste of food may be important in food choice and dietary intakes (1,2). While taste perception in the laboratory has been widely studied, it has rarely been taken into account when exploring dietary patterns in a population (3). The aim of this work is to identify consumers' taste perceptions for a list of foods. The National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS) rolling programme year 9 was used to generate a list of foods consumed by adolescents (10-19 years old). 1748 different foods were grouped by type/food group, and/or sugar/salt contents into 7 main and 23 subgroups. A pilot test identified foods with high agreement to further limit the list. The shortened food list was included in an online survey which was distributed to Facebook groups and Twitter. Food-taste classification questions asked participants to allocate one main taste to each food: sweet, salty, sour, bitter and savoury/umami;neutral and never tried. To minimize participant burden, the food list was divided into 3 and participants were asked to complete one part with an option to complete the rest. Foods were allocated to taste categories based on agreement by ≥ 50% of respondents. If there was a < 50% agreement, foods were classified by allocation to two+ taste categories based on the highest scoring taste combinations The pilot questionnaire was completed by 19 participants. 15/19 rated 55 foods as the same taste and these were removed from the final questionnaire. The final food list contained 184 items. The main online questionnaire obtained 209 responses from 162 females, 44 males, (3 not known). The age range was from 18-70+ years with the majority between 40-59 years old. Seven reported having COVID-19, but only 3 were tested positive (none experienced a taste loss). Food items were classified as 29% neutral, 22% sweet, 11% savoury/umami, 9% salty, 7% bitter, and 5% sour. Six mixed tastes categories were identified: savoury/umami-salty (11%), sweet-sour (3%), sweet-bitter (2%), sour-bitter (1%), salty-bitter (0.5%) and savoury/umami-bitter (1%). In the next step of the study, taste categories will be applied to the remaining foods consumed by adolescents reported in the NDNS to generate taste patterns allowing us to explore links with nutrition and anthropometry. We have characterised major tastes for all foods consumed in the most recent NDNS. This will allow us to create a UK food-taste database and explore dietary-taste patterns in the NDNS.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Traditional methods
- Author
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B, Amoutzopoulos, T, Steer, C, Roberts, J E, Cade, C J, Boushey, C E, Collins, E, Trolle, E J, de Boer, N, Ziauddeen, C, van Rossum, E, Buurma, D, Coyle, and P, Page
- Subjects
Nutrition surveys ,WebDASC, Web-based Dietary Assessment Software for Children ,AES, Australian Eating Survey ,MRC, Medical Research Council ,Dietary assessment technologies ,AHS, Australian Health Survey ,mFR, mobile food record ,Mobile applications ,DNFCS, Dutch National Food Consumption Survey ,ICDAM9, 9th International Conference on Diet and Activity Methods ,Web-based tools ,AMPM, Automated Multiple-Pass Method ,RP, Rolling Programme ,NDNS, National Diet and Nutrition Survey ,ASA24, Automated Self-Administered 24-hour Recall ,NHANES, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey ,Research Article - Abstract
The aim of the present paper is to summarise current and future applications of dietary assessment technologies in nutrition surveys in developed countries. It includes the discussion of key points and highlights of subsequent developments from a panel discussion to address strengths and weaknesses of traditional dietary assessment methods (food records, FFQ, 24 h recalls, diet history with interviewer-assisted data collection) v. new technology-based dietary assessment methods (web-based and mobile device applications). The panel discussion ‘Traditional methods v. new technologies: dilemmas for dietary assessment in population surveys’, was held at the 9th International Conference on Diet and Activity Methods (ICDAM9), Brisbane, September 2015. Despite respondent and researcher burden, traditional methods have been most commonly used in nutrition surveys. However, dietary assessment technologies offer potential advantages including faster data processing and better data quality. This is a fast-moving field and there is evidence of increasing demand for the use of new technologies amongst the general public and researchers. There is a need for research and investment to support efforts being made to facilitate the inclusion of new technologies for rapid, accurate and representative data.
- Published
- 2018
4. Interventions to reduce consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages or increase water intake: evidence from a systematic review and meta-analysis
- Author
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E J, Vargas-Garcia, C E L, Evans, A, Prestwich, B J, Sykes-Muskett, J, Hooson, and J E, Cade
- Subjects
Beverages ,Non-Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Dietary Sugars ,Health Behavior ,Age Factors ,Drinking ,Humans ,Health Promotion ,Public Health ,Nutritive Sweeteners ,Diet ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic - Abstract
A systematic review and meta-analyses were conducted to evaluate the effects of interventions to reduce sugar-sweetened beverages (SSB) or increase water intakes and to examine the impact of behaviour change techniques (BCTs) in consumption patterns. Randomized and nonrandomized controlled trials published after January 1990 and until December 2016 reporting daily changes in intakes of SSB or water in volumetric measurements (mL d
- Published
- 2016
5. Assessing dietary adequacy and temporal variability in the context of Covid-19 among Indigenous and rural communities in Kanungu District, Uganda: a mixed-methods study
- Author
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G Scarpa, L Berrang-Ford, S Twesigomwe, P Kakwangire, M Galazoula, C Zavaleta-Cortijo, K Patterson, D B Namanya, S Lwasa, E Ninshaba, M Kiconco, IHACC Research Team, and J E Cade
- Subjects
temporal variation ,dietary intake ,dietary adequacy ,Covid-19 ,Indigenous peoples ,young children ,Environmental sciences ,GE1-350 ,Public aspects of medicine ,RA1-1270 - Abstract
Dietary adequacy is hard to achieve for many people living in low-income countries, who suffer from nutritional deficiencies. Climate change, which alters weather conditions, has combined with other cascading and compound events to disrupt Indigenous communities’ food systems, limiting the consumption of adequate diets. The aim of this work was to conduct a proof-of-concept study exploring dietary adequacy, and to investigate evidence for temporal variation in the dietary intake of Indigenous and non-Indigenous communities in Kanungu District, Uganda in the context of the Covid-19 outbreak. We randomly selected 60 participants (20 mothers, 20 fathers and 20 children aged between 6 and 23 months) from two Indigenous Batwa and two Bakiga settlements. A mixed-methods study with concurrent qualitative and quantitative data collection was conducted. Monthly dietary intake data were collected from each participant from February to July 2021 through 24 h recall surveys using a specially developed Ugandan food composition database included in the online tool myfood24. At the same time, we also collected: (i) demographic and contextual data related to Covid-19; (ii) data on weather and seasonality; (iii) data on the perception of dietary intake over the year, and during the Covid-19 period; (iv) baseline anthropometric measurements. The majority of the participants did not achieve nutrient adequacy over the 6 months period, and household dietary diversity scores were generally low. Pregnant and lactating women consumed a diet which was severely inadequate in terms of nutrient consumption. Caloric and nutrient intake varied over the 6 months period, with the highest food consumption in June and lowest in April. Temporal variation was more evident among Batwa participants. Vitamin A intake varied more over months than other nutrients in adults’ and children’s diets, and none met iodine requirements. Participants characterised the diverse mechanisms by which season and weather variability determined the type and amount of food consumed each month. Dietary intake showed indications of temporal variation that differed between nutrients. Also, they reported that the Covid-19 pandemic influenced their diet. During lockdown, 58% of adults reported changing dietary habits by consuming less—and less nutritious—foods. The findings of this work highlight that the majority of the Batwa and Bakiga participants did not meet the dietary requirements for their age and gender. Also, our research indicates that weather patterns and seasonality may cause variations in smallholder food production with consequences on households’ dietary intake. Emerging evidence suggests that nutrients and caloric intake vary monthly and under different weather conditions. Accurate and time-varying nutrition evaluations would help in identifying seasonal and monthly dietary needs, supporting preventive interventions protecting children and their parents from any form of malnutrition. Consideration of time-varying nutritional intake will become increasingly important as climate change affects the seasonality and availability of smallholder subsistence crops.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Inequalities in education and national income are associated with poorer diet: Pooled analysis of individual participant data across 12 European countries.
- Author
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H L Rippin, J Hutchinson, D C Greenwood, J Jewell, J J Breda, A Martin, D M Rippin, K Schindler, P Rust, S Fagt, J Matthiessen, E Nurk, K Nelis, M Kukk, H Tapanainen, L Valsta, T Heuer, E Sarkadi-Nagy, M Bakacs, S Tazhibayev, T Sharmanov, I Spiroski, M Beukers, C van Rossum, M Ocke, A K Lindroos, Eva Warensjö Lemming, and J E Cade
- Subjects
Medicine ,Science - Abstract
BACKGROUND:Malnutrition linked to noncommunicable diseases presents major health problems across Europe. The World Health Organisation encourages countries to conduct national dietary surveys to obtain data to inform public health policies designed to prevent noncommunicable diseases. METHODS:Data on 27334 participants aged 19-64y were harmonised and pooled across national dietary survey datasets from 12 countries across the WHO European Region. Weighted mean nutrient intakes were age-standardised using the Eurostat 2013 European Standard Population. Associations between country-level Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and key nutrients and nutrient densities were investigated using linear regression. The potential mitigating influence of participant-level educational status was explored. FINDINGS:Higher GDP was positively associated with total sugar intake (5·0% energy for each 10% increase in GDP, 95% CI 0·6, 9·3). Scandinavian countries had the highest vitamin D intakes. Participants with higher educational status had better nutritional intakes, particularly within lower GDP countries. A 10% higher GDP was associated with lower total fat intakes (-0·2% energy, 95% CI -0·3, -0·1) and higher daily total folate intakes (14μg, 95% CI 12, 16) in higher educated individuals. INTERPRETATION:Lower income countries and lower education groups had poorer diet, particularly for micronutrients. We demonstrate for the first time that higher educational status appeared to have a mitigating effect on poorer diet in lower income countries. It illustrates the feasibility and value of harmonising national dietary survey data to inform European policy regarding access to healthy diets, particularly in disadvantaged groups. It specifically highlights the need for strong policies supporting nutritional intakes, prioritising lower education groups and lower income countries.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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