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Prevalence of low-energy reporting in the 1930s

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2020

S. Whybrow
Affiliation:
Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen, AberdeenAB25 2ZD
J.I. Macdiarmid
Affiliation:
Rowett Institute, University of Aberdeen, AberdeenAB25 2ZD
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2020

Misreporting of foods by study participants when they self-record their diets is a ubiquitous feature of current dietary assessments. Some evidence suggests that the prevalence of misreporting, resulting in apparently low energy intakes (low energy reporting) has increased over the past three decades. Two studies conducted in England during the 1930s(Reference Widdowson1,Reference Widdowson and McCance2) are among the earliest dietary assessments of free-living subjects that used 7-d weighed intakes and rigorous methodology. This study aimed to estimate the prevalence of misreporting in the published data of these two studies.

Subjects (63 men and 63 women) were predominantly students, housewives and professionals in sedentary occupations. Body weight, height and BMI were calculated from the published data(Reference Widdowson1,Reference Widdowson and McCance2) and BMR was estimated using standard formulae. Probable low-energy reporters were identified where energy intake:BMR was less than the cut-off value for plausible intakes calculated using occupation relevant physical activity levels(Reference Goldberg, Black and Jebb3).

Mean body weight (65.9 SD 6.9kg) and BMI (23.6 SD 4.3 kg/m2) were less than typically reported in modern studies and only 25% had a BMI > 25 kg/m2. Mean reported daily energy intake (11.0 SD 2.3MJ) and energy intake:BMR (1.71 SD 0.36) were higher than typical modern values in the literature. Only two men and one woman were identified as probable low-energy reporters, equal to 2.3% of the sample population. This is considerably lower than the prevalence of around 35%, seen in more recent studies. Assuming activity levels were the same in the 1930s as now, as used here, is an obvious limitation. However, reanalysing the data using contemporary estimates of daily energy requirement(Reference Orr and Leitch4) raised the sample's estimated activity level from 1.64*BMR to 1.90*BMR, and the prevalence of low-energy reporters to 18.3%.

Potential reasons for an increase in low-energy reporting include a higher prevalence of obesity now. Low energy reporting is often associated with increasing BMI because of conscious dietary restriction, social-desirability, and over-estimation of BMR at higher body weights. Changing meal patterns may have made it easier to forget, or deliberately omit, some foods (e.g. snacks).Low-energy reporting appears to have been far less prevalent in these two early dietary studies than might be expected from more recent experience.

References

Widdowson, E (1936) Journal of Hygiene 3, 269290.10.1017/S0022172400043643CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Widdowson, E & McCance, R (1936) Journal of Hygiene 3, 293309.Google Scholar
Goldberg, G, Black, A, Jebb, S et al. (1991) Eur J Clin Nutr 45, 569581.Google Scholar
Orr, J & Leitch, I (1938) Nutrition Abstr & Rev 7, 509529.Google Scholar