19 research outputs found

    Estudos de consumo alimentar: aspectos metodológicos gerais e o seu emprego na avaliação de crianças e adolescentes Food consumption studies: general methodological aspects and its use in the evaluation of children and adolescents aged

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    Este artigo discute aspectos metodológicos dos estudos de consumo alimentar em crianças e adolescentes. Para compreender esses aspectos, descreve, em contexto mais amplo, a importância da Epidemiologia Nutricional no estudo descritivo da relação da dieta com o surgimento das enfermidades, bem como origem histórica, importância, vantagens, limitações e usos dos métodos empregados para medir a ingestão alimentar, especialmente em crianças e adolescentes, em estudos epidemiológicos populacionais. Apresenta ainda alguns trabalhos da literatura científica clássica e contemporânea, demonstrando os resultados obtidos e algumas sugestões para aperfeiçoamento desses métodos. Finalmente, evidencia os aspectos mais relevantes que, por consenso de vários pesquisadores, competem como fatores limitantes ou facilitadores no emprego desses métodos, conferindo a esses, maior validade e reprodutibilidade nos estudos de consumo alimentar de crianças e adolescentes.<br>This article discusses methodological aspects of food consumption studies in children and adolescents. To reach the understanding of these methods it provides the value of Nutritional Epidemiology in a general context through a descriptive study of diet relation with the manifestation of disease as well as historical origin, value, advantage, constraints and use of methods employed to measure food intake, especially in children and adolescents in population epidemiological studies. In addition, it presents classic and contemporaneous literature demonstrating results obtained and some suggestions to improve these methods. Finally, it discloses the more relevant aspects that by consensus of many researchers compete with constraining and facilitating factors in their use providing them with more validity and reproducibility concerning studies of food consumption for children and adolescents

    A comparative study of dietary intake among urban Japanese and Chinese aged 50∼79

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    This study examined the difference in dietary intake between middle-aged and elderly Japanese and Chinese. Volunteers aged 50–79 living in two cities in both Japan and China were recruited in local community service centers and were asked to complete a 3-day diet recording. The final results were based on 356 subjects (166 Chinese and 190 Japanese). In men, the Japanese subjects significantly consumed more energy, with a large proportion of the energy coming from carbohydrates, dietary fiber, vitamin A, vitamin B2, vitamin C and they consumed less iron, and a lower proportion of energy from protein and fat than in the Chinese subjects. In women, the Japanese subjects had significantly higher intakes of energy, the proportion of energy from carbohydrates, dietary fiber, calcium, vitamin A, vitamin B1, vitamin B2, vitamin C and they consumed less iron, with the proportion of energy from protein and from fat in comparison with the Chinese women. Fat intake provided more than 29% of the total dietary energy in Chinese subjects. Daily intake of food items was significantly greater in the Japanese participants, both men and women (18.54 ±2.85, 20.11 ± 2.40, respectively), than in the Chinese subjects (14.11 ± 3.62, 15.51 ± 4.15, respectively) (p<0.01 by Mann WhitneyU-test). The present study suggests that the middleaged and elderly Chinese subjects should increase their variety of foods consumed while decreasing their consumption of high-fat foods. For the Japanese subjects, the higher intake of total calories among the woman should also be noted
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