Development of a diet quality index to assess adherence to Canadian dietary recommendations in 3-year-old children

Megan Jarman, Nisha Vashi, Amy Angus, Rhonda C Bell, Gerald F Giesbrecht,

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective:
Little is known about the diet quality of preschool children in Canada. We adapted an established diet quality index for European preschool children to align with the Canadian context and applied the index to dietary data of 3-year-old children to assess patterns of diet quality.

Design:
Our diet quality index (DQI-C) consists of four components that align with Canada’s Food Guide (Vegetables and Fruit, Grain Products, Milk and Alternatives and Meat and Alternatives) and two components that account for less healthy intakes (Candy/Snacks, and Sugar-Sweetened Beverages (SSB)). The ratio between consumption v. recommended intakes is calculated for each component and summed to give a total score from 0 to 6.

Setting:
Alberta, Canada.

Participants:
The DQI-C was applied to FFQ data from 1260 3-year-old children.

Results:
Mean DQI-C was 3·69 (sd 0·6). Most children met recommendations for Vegetables and Fruit (73 %) and Meat and Alternatives (70 %); however, fewer met recommendations for Milk and Alternatives (38 %) and Grain Products (13 %). Children in the lowest quartile for DQI-C score consumed a mean of 82 g of Candy/Snacks and 193 g of SSB daily, whereas those in the highest quartile consumed 45 g/d and 17 g/d of Candy and Snacks and SSB, respectively.

Conclusion:
This DQI-C score is useful for ranking Canadian preschool children according to their overall diet quality. There is room for improvement for consumptions of Grain Products, Meat and Alternatives, Candy/Snacks and SSB, which could be a target for initiatives to improve diet quality of preschool children in Canada.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)385-393
JournalPublic health nutrition
Volume23
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 12 Sept 2019

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