Assessment of vitamin D intake among Libyan women - adaptation and validation of specific food frequency questionnaire

2018
Authors
Faid, FathiaNikolić, Marina
Milešević, Jelena P.

Zeković, Milica T.

Kadvan, Agnes
Gurinović, Mirjana A.

Glibetić, Marija D.

Article (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Vitamin D deficiency (VDD) has pandemic proportions worldwide. Numerous studies report on high prevalence of VDD in sunny regions like Near East and North Africa (NENA). Previous studies indicated that Libyan population was at risk of VDD. To contribute to the body of evidence, measurement of vitamin D status on children, adults, in Misurata region was conducted, and confirmed with validated dietary intake study. Serum 25(OH)D was analysed using electrochemiluminescence protein binding assay. Existing Food Frequency Questionnaires (FFQ) were adapted to Libyan Women Food Frequency Questionnaire (LW-FFQ). Repeated 24h dietary recalls and LW-FFQ were employed in vitamin D intake evaluation. LW-FFQ was validated using 24h dietary recall and vitamin D status as referent methods. The questionnaires included anthropometry and lifestyle information. Vitamin D status assessment revealed inadequate levels (25(OH)D lt 50nmol/l) in almost 80% of participants. Women (25-64y) were identified as th...e most vulnerable group with vitamin D inadequacy present in 82% (61.6% had 25(OH)D lt 25nmol/l, and 20.2% had 25-50nmol/l 25(OH)D). Average Vitamin D intake within the study sample (n=316) was 3.9 +/- 7.9 mu g/d, with 92% participants below both Institute of Medicine (IOM) (10 mu g/d) and European Food Safety Authority (15 mu g/d) recommendations. Measured vitamin D status, in 13% of this group, correlated significantly (p=0.015) with intake estimates. Based on self-report, consumption of vitamin D supplements does not exist among study participants. Additional lifestyle factors influencing vitamin D status were analysed. Only 2% of study participants spend approximately 11 min on the sun daily, 60.4% were obese, 23.1% were overweight and 71.2% reported low physical activity. These findings confirm previous reports on high prevalence of VDD in women across NENA, and in Libya. The situation calls for multi-sectoral actions and public health initiatives to address dietary and lifestyle habits.
Keywords:
Women / Vitamin D / Libya / Misurata / NENASource:
Libyan Journal of Medicine, 2018, 13, 1, 1502028-Publisher:
- Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon
Funding / projects:
- Biological effects, nutritional intake and status of folate and polysaturate fatty acid (PUFA): improvement of nutrition in Serbia (RS-41030)
- Libyan Ministry of Higher Education & Scientific Research [393]
DOI: 10.1080/19932820.2018.1502028
ISSN: 1993-2820
PubMed: 30044720
WoS: 000439978700001
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85050549662
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Institut za medicinska istraživanjaTY - JOUR AU - Faid, Fathia AU - Nikolić, Marina AU - Milešević, Jelena P. AU - Zeković, Milica T. AU - Kadvan, Agnes AU - Gurinović, Mirjana A. AU - Glibetić, Marija D. PY - 2018 UR - http://rimi.imi.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/843 AB - Vitamin D deficiency (VDD) has pandemic proportions worldwide. Numerous studies report on high prevalence of VDD in sunny regions like Near East and North Africa (NENA). Previous studies indicated that Libyan population was at risk of VDD. To contribute to the body of evidence, measurement of vitamin D status on children, adults, in Misurata region was conducted, and confirmed with validated dietary intake study. Serum 25(OH)D was analysed using electrochemiluminescence protein binding assay. Existing Food Frequency Questionnaires (FFQ) were adapted to Libyan Women Food Frequency Questionnaire (LW-FFQ). Repeated 24h dietary recalls and LW-FFQ were employed in vitamin D intake evaluation. LW-FFQ was validated using 24h dietary recall and vitamin D status as referent methods. The questionnaires included anthropometry and lifestyle information. Vitamin D status assessment revealed inadequate levels (25(OH)D lt 50nmol/l) in almost 80% of participants. Women (25-64y) were identified as the most vulnerable group with vitamin D inadequacy present in 82% (61.6% had 25(OH)D lt 25nmol/l, and 20.2% had 25-50nmol/l 25(OH)D). Average Vitamin D intake within the study sample (n=316) was 3.9 +/- 7.9 mu g/d, with 92% participants below both Institute of Medicine (IOM) (10 mu g/d) and European Food Safety Authority (15 mu g/d) recommendations. Measured vitamin D status, in 13% of this group, correlated significantly (p=0.015) with intake estimates. Based on self-report, consumption of vitamin D supplements does not exist among study participants. Additional lifestyle factors influencing vitamin D status were analysed. Only 2% of study participants spend approximately 11 min on the sun daily, 60.4% were obese, 23.1% were overweight and 71.2% reported low physical activity. These findings confirm previous reports on high prevalence of VDD in women across NENA, and in Libya. The situation calls for multi-sectoral actions and public health initiatives to address dietary and lifestyle habits. PB - Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon T2 - Libyan Journal of Medicine T1 - Assessment of vitamin D intake among Libyan women - adaptation and validation of specific food frequency questionnaire IS - 1 SP - 1502028 VL - 13 DO - 10.1080/19932820.2018.1502028 UR - conv_4342 ER -
@article{ author = "Faid, Fathia and Nikolić, Marina and Milešević, Jelena P. and Zeković, Milica T. and Kadvan, Agnes and Gurinović, Mirjana A. and Glibetić, Marija D.", year = "2018", abstract = "Vitamin D deficiency (VDD) has pandemic proportions worldwide. Numerous studies report on high prevalence of VDD in sunny regions like Near East and North Africa (NENA). Previous studies indicated that Libyan population was at risk of VDD. To contribute to the body of evidence, measurement of vitamin D status on children, adults, in Misurata region was conducted, and confirmed with validated dietary intake study. Serum 25(OH)D was analysed using electrochemiluminescence protein binding assay. Existing Food Frequency Questionnaires (FFQ) were adapted to Libyan Women Food Frequency Questionnaire (LW-FFQ). Repeated 24h dietary recalls and LW-FFQ were employed in vitamin D intake evaluation. LW-FFQ was validated using 24h dietary recall and vitamin D status as referent methods. The questionnaires included anthropometry and lifestyle information. Vitamin D status assessment revealed inadequate levels (25(OH)D lt 50nmol/l) in almost 80% of participants. Women (25-64y) were identified as the most vulnerable group with vitamin D inadequacy present in 82% (61.6% had 25(OH)D lt 25nmol/l, and 20.2% had 25-50nmol/l 25(OH)D). Average Vitamin D intake within the study sample (n=316) was 3.9 +/- 7.9 mu g/d, with 92% participants below both Institute of Medicine (IOM) (10 mu g/d) and European Food Safety Authority (15 mu g/d) recommendations. Measured vitamin D status, in 13% of this group, correlated significantly (p=0.015) with intake estimates. Based on self-report, consumption of vitamin D supplements does not exist among study participants. Additional lifestyle factors influencing vitamin D status were analysed. Only 2% of study participants spend approximately 11 min on the sun daily, 60.4% were obese, 23.1% were overweight and 71.2% reported low physical activity. These findings confirm previous reports on high prevalence of VDD in women across NENA, and in Libya. The situation calls for multi-sectoral actions and public health initiatives to address dietary and lifestyle habits.", publisher = "Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon", journal = "Libyan Journal of Medicine", title = "Assessment of vitamin D intake among Libyan women - adaptation and validation of specific food frequency questionnaire", number = "1", pages = "1502028", volume = "13", doi = "10.1080/19932820.2018.1502028", url = "conv_4342" }
Faid, F., Nikolić, M., Milešević, J. P., Zeković, M. T., Kadvan, A., Gurinović, M. A.,& Glibetić, M. D.. (2018). Assessment of vitamin D intake among Libyan women - adaptation and validation of specific food frequency questionnaire. in Libyan Journal of Medicine Taylor & Francis Ltd, Abingdon., 13(1), 1502028. https://doi.org/10.1080/19932820.2018.1502028 conv_4342
Faid F, Nikolić M, Milešević JP, Zeković MT, Kadvan A, Gurinović MA, Glibetić MD. Assessment of vitamin D intake among Libyan women - adaptation and validation of specific food frequency questionnaire. in Libyan Journal of Medicine. 2018;13(1):1502028. doi:10.1080/19932820.2018.1502028 conv_4342 .
Faid, Fathia, Nikolić, Marina, Milešević, Jelena P., Zeković, Milica T., Kadvan, Agnes, Gurinović, Mirjana A., Glibetić, Marija D., "Assessment of vitamin D intake among Libyan women - adaptation and validation of specific food frequency questionnaire" in Libyan Journal of Medicine, 13, no. 1 (2018):1502028, https://doi.org/10.1080/19932820.2018.1502028 ., conv_4342 .