Application of a Latent Transition Model to Estimate the Usual Prevalence of Dietary Patterns

Autores da FMUP
Participantes de fora da FMUP
- Torres, D.
Unidades de investigação
Abstract
Background: This study aims to derive habitual dietary patterns of the Portuguese adult population by applying two methodological approaches: a latent class model and a latent transition model. The novel application of the latent transition model allows us to determine the day-to-day variability of diet and to calculate the usual prevalence of dietary patterns. Methods: Participants are from the National Food, Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey of the Portuguese population, 2015-2016 (2029 women; 1820 men, aged >= 18 years). Diet was collected by two 24 h dietary recalls (8-15 days apart). Dietary patterns were derived by: (1) a latent class model using the arithmetic mean of food weigh intake, with concomitant variables (age and sex); (2) a latent transition model allowing the transition from one pattern to another, with the same concomitant variables. Results: Six dietary patterns were identified by a latent class model. By using a latent transition model, three dietary patterns were identified: "In-transition to Western" (higher red meat and alcohol intake; followed by middle-aged men), "Western" (higher meats/eggs and energy-dense foods intake; followed by younger men), and "Traditional-Healthier" (higher intake of fruit, vegetables and fish, characteristic of older women). Most individuals followed the same pattern on both days, but around 26% transited between "In-transition to Western" and "Western". The prevalence of the dietary patterns using a single recall day (40%, 27%, 33%, respectively) is different from the usual prevalence obtained by the latent transition probabilities (48%, 36%, 16%). Conclusion: Three dietary patterns, largely dependent on age and sex, were identified for the Portuguese adult population: "In-transition to Western" (48%), "Western" (36%), and "Traditional-Healthier" (16%), but 26% were transient between patterns. Dietary patterns are, in general, deviating from traditional habits.
Dados da publicação
- ISSN/ISSNe:
- 2072-6643, 2072-6643
- Tipo:
- Article
- Páginas:
- 1-15
- DOI:
- 10.3390/nu13010133
- Link para outro recurso:
- www.scopus.com
Nutrients Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI)
Citações Recebidas na Web of Science: 1
Citações Recebidas na Scopus: 1
Documentos
- Não há documentos
Filiações
Keywords
- feeding behavior; latent class analysis; latent transition analysis; usual intake; adults
Financiamento
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Citar a publicação
Oliveira A,Lopes C,Torres D,Ramos E,Severo M. Application of a Latent Transition Model to Estimate the Usual Prevalence of Dietary Patterns. Nutrients. 2021. 13. (1):p. 1-15. IF:6,706. (1).