Combining nutrient intake from food/beverages and vitamin/mineral supplements

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by Didier Garriguet

Abstract
Keywords
Findings
Authors

Abstract

Background

To calculate total intake of a nutrient and estimate inadequate intake for a population, the amounts derived from food/beverages and from vitamin/mineral supplements must be combined.  The two methods Statistics Canada has suggested present problems of interpretation.

Data and methods

Data collected from 34,386 respondents to the 2004 Canadian Community Health Survey―Nutrition were used to compare four methods of combining nutrient intake from food/beverages and vitamin/mineral supplements:  adding average intake from supplements to the 24-hour food/beverage recall and estimating the usual distribution in the population (Method 1);  estimating usual individual intake from food/beverages and adding intake from supplements (Method 2); and dividing the population into supplement users and non-users and applying Method 1 or Method 2 and combining the estimates based on the percentages of users and non-users (Methods 3 and 4).

Results

Interpretation problems arise with Methods 1 and 2; for example, the percentage of the population with inadequate intake of vitamin C and folate equivalents falls outside the expected minimum-maximum range.  These interpretation problems are not observed with Methods 3 and 4.

Interpretation

Interpretation problems that may arise in combining food and supplement intake of a given nutrient are overcome if the population is divided into supplement users and non-users before Method 1 or Method 2 is applied.

Keywords

nutrition surveys, 24-hour dietary recall, vitamin and mineral supplements, usual intake

Findings

The 2004 Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS)―Nutrition was the first in more than 30 years to study Canadians' eating habits. One of the goals was to determine total usual intake of selected nutrients. To that end, the CCHS collected information about food and beverage consumption, based on a 24-hour recall.[Full text]

Authors

Didier Garriguet (1-613-951-7187; Didier.Garriguet@statcan.gc.ca) is with the Health Analysis Division at Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Ontario, K1A 0T6.