Abstract

The aim of the study was to assess the reproducibility of a short-form, multicomponent dietary questionnaire (SF-FFQ4PolishChildren) in Polish children and adolescents. The study involved 437 children (6–10 years old) and 630 adolescents (11–15 years old) from rural and urban areas of Poland. The self-administered questionnaire was related to nutrition knowledge, dietary habits, active/sedentary lifestyle, self-reported weight and height, and socioeconomic data. The questionnaire was completed with a two-week interval—twice by parents for their children (test and retest for children), twice by adolescents themselves (adolescent’s test and retest) and once by adolescents’ parents (parent’s test). The strength of agreement measured using the kappa statistic was interpreted as follows: 0–0.20 slight, 0.21–0.40 fair, 0.41–0.60 moderate, 0.61–0.80 good, and 0.81–1.00 excellent. Regarding the frequency of consumption of food items and meals, kappa statistics were 0.46–0.81 (the lowest: fruit/mixed fruit and vegetable juices; the highest: Energy drinks) in test–retest for children, 0.30–0.54 (fruit/mixed fruit and vegetable juices; breakfast, respectively) in adolescent’s test–retest, 0.27–0.56 (the lowest: Sweets, fruit, dairy products; the highest: Breakfast) in adolescent’s test and parent’s test. Lower kappa statistics were found for more frequently consumed foods (juices, fruit, vegetables), higher kappa statistics were found for rarely consumed foods (energy drinks, fast food). Across study groups, kappa statistics for diet quality scores were 0.31–0.55 (pro-healthy diet index, pHDI) and 0.26–0.45 (non-healthy diet index, nHDI), for active/sedentary lifestyle items they were 0.31–0.72, for components of the Family Affluence Scale (FAS) they were 0.55–0.93, for BMI categories (based on self-reported weight and height) they were 0.64–0.67, for the nutrition knowledge (NK) of adolescents the kappa was 0.36, for the nutrition knowledge of children’s parents it was 0.62. The Spearman’s correlations for diet quality scores were 0.52–0.76 (pHDI) and 0.53–0.83 (nHDI), for screen time score they were 0.45–0.78, for physical activity score they were 0.51–0.77, for the FAS score they were 0.90–0.93, and for the NK score they were 0.68–0.80. The questionnaire can be recommended to evaluate dietary and lifestyle behaviors among children and adolescents.

Highlights

  • Dietary and lifestyle behavior evaluation in children and adolescents is crucial to develop and implement effective policies preventing dietary-related diseases and ensuring public health in the future

  • Points), high (66.66–100% points); nHDI (% points)—a non-healthy diet index composed of four questions and ranged from 0–100 points [22]; nHDI category—low

  • (13–18 points) [22]; 2 in a group of 6–10-year-old children, nutrition knowledge was assessed in their parents; pHDI—a pro-healthy diet index composed of four questions and assessed in three categories: Low (0–33.32% points), moderate (33.33–66.65% points), high (66.6–100% points) [22]; nHDI—a non-healthy diet index composed of four questions and assessed in three categories: Low (0–33.32% points), moderate (33.33–66.65% points), high (66.66–100% points)

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Summary

Introduction

Dietary and lifestyle behavior evaluation in children and adolescents is crucial to develop and implement effective policies preventing dietary-related diseases and ensuring public health in the future. The relative validity of a semi-quantitative FFQ against repeated 24-h dietary recalls was evaluated in Polish children aged 3 years old, showing overestimation of energy and nutrient intake by the FFQ (e.g., median of differences in energy intake between the two methods was 255.4 kcal, and in the range of 7.0–31.0 g for intake of macronutrients) [14]. Was tested in Polish adolescents and adults aged 15–65 years, showing moderate to very good reproducibility of the questionnaire (e.g., kappa statistic for food items was in the range of 0.62–0.84 for the interviewer-administered questionnaire and 0.5–0.78 for the self-administered questionnaire in healthy subjects) [15]. The aim of this study was to assess the reproducibility of a short-form, multicomponent dietary questionnaire to assess food frequency consumption, nutrition knowledge, and lifestyle (SF-FFQ4PolishChildren) in Polish schoolchildren aged 6–15 years

Study Design
Participants
Dietary Habits
Nutrition Knowledge
The Family Affluence Scale Components
Anthropometric Data
2.10. Statistical Analysis
Participant Characteristics
Socioeconomic Data
Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
Conclusions
Full Text
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