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How to find information on national food and nutrient consumption surveys across Europe: systematic literature review and questionnaires to selected country experts are both good strategies

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2009
254.pdf (251.3Kb)
Authors
Blanquer, Maria
Garcia-Alvarez, Alicia
Ribas-Barba, Lourdes
Wijnhoven, Trudy M. A.
Tabacchi, Garden
Gurinović, Mirjana A.
Serra-Majem, Lluis
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
The present research was conducted within the framework of the EURopean micronutrient RECommendations Aligned project. in order to identify the best practice in assessing nutrient intakes, a search strategy for collecting data from national food consumption surveys/studies in Europe was developed. Systematic literature searches were carried out on twenty-eight European and the four European Free Trade Association Countries. A questionnaire was also sent to two to five experts in each country. Systematic reviews using PubMed yielded 12 703 abstracts that were reduced to 200 studies using inclusion and exclusion criteria. Similarly, a search of ministry web sites yielded 3033 hits. and subsequently reduced to nine Surveys. Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Sweden, Spain and the United Kingdom were the countries with most data and Slovenia and Liechtenstein were those with the least. Seventy-eight expert questionnaires were obtained from all Countries except for Liechtenstein. Luxembourg... and Slovakia. Detailed results and references are given. A systematic search and questionnaires are equally good at identifying national surveys across countries. Literature searching provides globally accessible and objective information albeit limited, whereas the questionnaire provides information that, depending upon responders, can be more complete. A combination of both strategies is recommended.

Keywords:
National nutrition surveys / Search methodology / European projects / Best practice
Source:
British Journal of Nutrition, 2009, 101, S37-S50
Publisher:
  • Cambridge Univ Press, Cambridge
Funding / projects:
  • Commission of the European Communities
  • Commission of the European Communities, specific RTD Programme "Quality of Life and Management of Living Resources," 6th Framework Programme [FP6-036196-2]

DOI: 10.1017/S0007114509990572

ISSN: 0007-1145

PubMed: 19594963

WoS: 000268650500007

Scopus: 2-s2.0-70149111273
[ Google Scholar ]
14
12
URI
http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/257
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' publications
Institution/Community
Institut za medicinska istraživanja
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Blanquer, Maria
AU  - Garcia-Alvarez, Alicia
AU  - Ribas-Barba, Lourdes
AU  - Wijnhoven, Trudy M. A.
AU  - Tabacchi, Garden
AU  - Gurinović, Mirjana A.
AU  - Serra-Majem, Lluis
PY  - 2009
UR  - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/257
AB  - The present research was conducted within the framework of the EURopean micronutrient RECommendations Aligned project. in order to identify the best practice in assessing nutrient intakes, a search strategy for collecting data from national food consumption surveys/studies in Europe was developed. Systematic literature searches were carried out on twenty-eight European and the four European Free Trade Association Countries. A questionnaire was also sent to two to five experts in each country. Systematic reviews using PubMed yielded 12 703 abstracts that were reduced to 200 studies using inclusion and exclusion criteria. Similarly, a search of ministry web sites yielded 3033 hits. and subsequently reduced to nine Surveys. Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Sweden, Spain and the United Kingdom were the countries with most data and Slovenia and Liechtenstein were those with the least. Seventy-eight expert questionnaires were obtained from all Countries except for Liechtenstein. Luxembourg and Slovakia. Detailed results and references are given. A systematic search and questionnaires are equally good at identifying national surveys across countries. Literature searching provides globally accessible and objective information albeit limited, whereas the questionnaire provides information that, depending upon responders, can be more complete. A combination of both strategies is recommended.
PB  - Cambridge Univ Press, Cambridge
T2  - British Journal of Nutrition
T1  - How to find information on national food and nutrient consumption surveys across Europe: systematic literature review and questionnaires to selected country experts are both good strategies
EP  - S50
SP  - S37
VL  - 101
DO  - 10.1017/S0007114509990572
UR  - conv_2144
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Blanquer, Maria and Garcia-Alvarez, Alicia and Ribas-Barba, Lourdes and Wijnhoven, Trudy M. A. and Tabacchi, Garden and Gurinović, Mirjana A. and Serra-Majem, Lluis",
year = "2009",
abstract = "The present research was conducted within the framework of the EURopean micronutrient RECommendations Aligned project. in order to identify the best practice in assessing nutrient intakes, a search strategy for collecting data from national food consumption surveys/studies in Europe was developed. Systematic literature searches were carried out on twenty-eight European and the four European Free Trade Association Countries. A questionnaire was also sent to two to five experts in each country. Systematic reviews using PubMed yielded 12 703 abstracts that were reduced to 200 studies using inclusion and exclusion criteria. Similarly, a search of ministry web sites yielded 3033 hits. and subsequently reduced to nine Surveys. Belgium, France, Germany, Ireland, Sweden, Spain and the United Kingdom were the countries with most data and Slovenia and Liechtenstein were those with the least. Seventy-eight expert questionnaires were obtained from all Countries except for Liechtenstein. Luxembourg and Slovakia. Detailed results and references are given. A systematic search and questionnaires are equally good at identifying national surveys across countries. Literature searching provides globally accessible and objective information albeit limited, whereas the questionnaire provides information that, depending upon responders, can be more complete. A combination of both strategies is recommended.",
publisher = "Cambridge Univ Press, Cambridge",
journal = "British Journal of Nutrition",
title = "How to find information on national food and nutrient consumption surveys across Europe: systematic literature review and questionnaires to selected country experts are both good strategies",
pages = "S50-S37",
volume = "101",
doi = "10.1017/S0007114509990572",
url = "conv_2144"
}
Blanquer, M., Garcia-Alvarez, A., Ribas-Barba, L., Wijnhoven, T. M. A., Tabacchi, G., Gurinović, M. A.,& Serra-Majem, L.. (2009). How to find information on national food and nutrient consumption surveys across Europe: systematic literature review and questionnaires to selected country experts are both good strategies. in British Journal of Nutrition
Cambridge Univ Press, Cambridge., 101, S37-S50.
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114509990572
conv_2144
Blanquer M, Garcia-Alvarez A, Ribas-Barba L, Wijnhoven TMA, Tabacchi G, Gurinović MA, Serra-Majem L. How to find information on national food and nutrient consumption surveys across Europe: systematic literature review and questionnaires to selected country experts are both good strategies. in British Journal of Nutrition. 2009;101:S37-S50.
doi:10.1017/S0007114509990572
conv_2144 .
Blanquer, Maria, Garcia-Alvarez, Alicia, Ribas-Barba, Lourdes, Wijnhoven, Trudy M. A., Tabacchi, Garden, Gurinović, Mirjana A., Serra-Majem, Lluis, "How to find information on national food and nutrient consumption surveys across Europe: systematic literature review and questionnaires to selected country experts are both good strategies" in British Journal of Nutrition, 101 (2009):S37-S50,
https://doi.org/10.1017/S0007114509990572 .,
conv_2144 .

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