2019
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0221047
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Evaluation of the dietary intake data coding process in a clinical setting: Implications for research practice

Abstract: Background High quality dietary intake data is required to support evidence of diet-disease relationships exposed in clinical research. Source data verification may be a useful quality assurance method in this setting. The present pilot study aimed to apply source data verification to evaluate the quality of the data coding process for dietary intake in a clinical trial and to explore potential barriers to data quality in this setting. Methods Using a sample of 20 cases… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(16 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
(56 reference statements)
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“…This is further amplified by the complexity of Southeast Asian diets, and the reliance on food consumed outside the home can make it difficult for individuals to be aware of all the ingredients in the food [32,44]. Mixed dishes are featured heavily in Southeast Asian cuisine and are known to be especially difficult to quantify given the different proportions of ingredients used in different settings [54]. The shared or multi-course meals common in Asian demographics may also further complicate the quantification of consumed foods, and respondents may leave out many details when attempting to record their intake [44].…”
Section: Limitations Of Current Dietary Recording Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is further amplified by the complexity of Southeast Asian diets, and the reliance on food consumed outside the home can make it difficult for individuals to be aware of all the ingredients in the food [32,44]. Mixed dishes are featured heavily in Southeast Asian cuisine and are known to be especially difficult to quantify given the different proportions of ingredients used in different settings [54]. The shared or multi-course meals common in Asian demographics may also further complicate the quantification of consumed foods, and respondents may leave out many details when attempting to record their intake [44].…”
Section: Limitations Of Current Dietary Recording Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Significant errors can also occur at the point of coding, especially in the case of open-ended diet records [33,[51][52][53][54][55]. These errors include: misinterpretation of portion sizes; unclear or inconsistent food names, particularly in the case of ethnic foods; or lack of detail with regards to food preparation methods and specific ingredients [54]. All of these factors require a degree of professional judgement on the part of the coder when the food records are interpreted, and this can differ between nutrition professionals [54].…”
Section: Limitations Of Current Dietary Recording Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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