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Assessing Initial Validity and Reliability of a Beverage Intake Questionnaire in Hispanic Preschool-Aged Children

Abstract Background Understanding the relationship between high-calorie beverage consumption and weight gain requires an accurate report of dietary intake. A critical need exists to develop and test the psychometrics of brief quantitative tools for minority pediatric populations. Objective To modify...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics 2016-12, Vol.116 (12), p.1951-1960
Main Authors: Lora, Karina R., PhD, Davy, Brenda, PhD, RD, Hedrick, Valisa, PhD, RD, Ferris, Ann M., PhD, RD, Anderson, Michael P., PhD, Wakefield, Dorothy, MS
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Abstract Background Understanding the relationship between high-calorie beverage consumption and weight gain requires an accurate report of dietary intake. A critical need exists to develop and test the psychometrics of brief quantitative tools for minority pediatric populations. Objective To modify the adult beverage intake questionnaire (BEVQ-15) for Hispanic preschool-aged children (BEVQ-PS) and test its validity and test–retest reliability in children aged 3 to 5 years. Design Cross-sectional. The modified quantitative 12-beverage category questionnaire assessed consumption of water, fruit juice, sweetened juice drinks, whole milk, reduced-fat milk, low-fat milk, flavored milk, carbonated sweetened drinks, diet carbonated drinks, sweet tea, tea with or without artificial sweetener, and sport drinks consumed during the past month. Hispanic mothers (n=109) recruited from day-care centers provided one 4-day food intake record (FIR) and completed two BEVQ-PS surveys during a 2-week period for their preschool-aged child. Data collection was conducted through one-on-one interviews in Spanish. Validity was assessed by comparing amounts (in grams) and energy intake (in kilocalories) for each beverage category between the first BEVQ-PS and the mean of the FIRs using paired t tests and Pearson’s correlation coefficient. Criteria for validity were nonsignificant mean differences in grams and kilocalories from the first BEVQ-PS and mean of the FIRs beverage categories, and significant correlation coefficients between beverage categories. Test–retest reliability was assessed by comparing grams and kilocalories for each beverage category in the first BEVQ-PS with those from the second BEVQ-PS using Pearson’s correlation coefficient. The criterion for reliability was a significant correlation coefficient between beverage categories. Significance was set at P
ISSN:2212-2672
2212-2680
DOI:10.1016/j.jand.2016.06.376