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Reproducibility of food intake in a food frequency questionnaire used in a general population

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Pages 85-95 | Received 17 Nov 1994, Accepted 31 Mar 1995, Published online: 04 Aug 2009
 

Abstract

This study evaluates the reproducibility of food intake reports in a 45‐item self‐administered food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) used for a diet study in a large cohort in New York State. The first FFQ was mailed in 1980, and a followup version containing 75 food items was mailed in 1988 to the eligible original participants. Reproducibility was evaluated by comparing the subjects’ 1988 responses with their original 1980 responses. Spearman's correlations ranged from 0.27 (nuts other than peanuts) to 0.56 (summer squash) in men and from 0.25 (tomatoes) to 0.51 (summer squash) in women. Analyses stratified by age, education, marital status, body mass index, cigarette smoking, alcohol drinking, and special diet revealed few substantial differences in correlations. The moderate reproducibility of foods in this questionnaire indicates that brief FFQs may be a useful tool to study food intake and chronic disease relationships in this population.

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