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Development and validation of a novel food frequency questionnaire for UK firefighters

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 October 2020

G.R. Lessons
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition Research Group, London Metropolitan University, London, N7 8DB
D. Bhakta
Affiliation:
Public Health Nutrition Research Group, London Metropolitan University, London, N7 8DB
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Abstract

Type
Abstract
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2020

Prevalence of overweight and obesity in UK firefighters may exceed that of the general population (Reference Lessons and Bhakta1). UK Firefighter dietary behavior has recently been investigated in a fire station-based dietary intervention pilot trial (Reference Lessons and Bhakta1), which utilised the EPIC-Norfolk food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) (Reference Bingham, Welch and McTaggart2). Although this was able to detect significant dietary changes (Reference Lessons and Bhakta1), participant feedback identified it as burdensome. Furthermore, it was validated for a different population group, therefore its validity for assessing firefighter diets is unknown. We developed and tested the validity and reproducibility of the UK's first firefighter FFQ (FF-FFQ).

In June 2019, the EPIC-Norfolk FFQ was completed by 180 London firefighters. The thirty least consumed food items (reported mean intakes of never or less than once/month) were removed. A question on takeaway food consumption was added, as fieldwork suggested takeaways to be regularly consumed. The resulting FF-FFQ amounted to a six-page document (reduced from eleven). This was successfully pre-tested on a firefighter focus group who found it understandable and acceptable. Its relative validity was then tested against three multi-pass 24 hr. recalls, collected over a four-month period (June-November 2019) on a sample of n = 69 firefighters.

Correlations between the methods were medium and significant (p < 0.01) for energy (r = 0.42), carbohydrate (r = 0.42), protein (r = 0.42), fat (r = 0.43), fibre (r = 0.49), saturated fat (SFA) (r = 0.45), monounsaturated fat (MUFA) (r = 0.32), vitamin C (r = 0.33) and sodium (r = 0.32), but weak for polyunsaturated fat (PUFA) (r = 0.24, p = 0.05). This is consistent with a review of FFQ validation studies (Reference Cade, Thompson and Burley3) which found correlation coefficients averaged between 0.4–0.5 when comparing a reference method with FFQs which display a specified portion size, but lower (0.2–0.5) when no portion size was specified. Similar to the EPIC-Norfolk FFQ, the FF-FFQ displays clearer portion sizes for some food groups than for others, which may explain the lower correlations for MUFA, PUFA, vitamin C and sodium. Bland-Altman analyses indicated good agreement between methods for energy and each nutrient, with an average of 96% of cases falling between the limits of agreement.

The FF-FFQ was also tested for reproducibility (n = 72). Comparisons were made between dietary intakes recorded by the FF-FFQ on two occasions, four months apart. Correlations were strong and significant (p < 0.01) for energy (r = 0.75), carbohydrate (r = 0.8), protein (r = 0.62), fat (r = 0.69), SFA (r = 0.66), MUFA (r = 0.71), PUFA (r = 0.7), fibre (r = 0.71), vitamin C (r = 0.69) and sodium (r = 0.74). Bland-Altman analyses also indicated good agreement between administrations indicating good precision, suggesting usefulness for detecting temporal dietary changes.

Showing reproducibility along with an overall acceptable level of relative validity, the FF-FFQ has demonstrated utility for its primary uses as both a screening tool to indicate high/low intakes of certain foods, and as a method for measuring dietary changes elicited by an intervention. This represents the first FFQ validation study for UK firefighters.

References

Lessons, GR, Bhakta, D (2018) Proc Nut Soc 77, OCE1, E21CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bingham, SA, Welch, AA, McTaggart, A et al. (2001) Public Health Nutr 4, 3, 847858Google Scholar
Cade, J, Thompson, R, Burley, V et al. (2002) Public Health Nutr 5, 4, 56758710.1079/PHN2001318CrossRefGoogle Scholar