Ahluwalia Namanjeet, Dwyer Johanna, Terry Ana, Moshfegh Alanna, Johnson Clifford
National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, National Center for Health Statistics, CDC, Hyattsville, MD;
Office of Dietary Supplements, NIH, Bethesda, MD; and.
Adv Nutr. 2016 Jan 15;7(1):121-34. doi: 10.3945/an.115.009258. Print 2016 Jan.
NHANES is the cornerstone for national nutrition monitoring to inform nutrition and health policy. Nutritional assessment in NHANES is described with a focus on dietary data collection, analysis, and uses in nutrition monitoring. NHANES has been collecting thorough data on diet, nutritional status, and chronic disease in cross-sectional surveys with nationally representative samples since the early 1970s. Continuous data collection began in 1999 with public data release in 2-y cycles on ∼10,000 participants. In 2002, the Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals and the NHANES dietary component were merged, forming a consolidated dietary data collection known as What We Eat in America; since then, 24-h recalls have been collected on 2 d using the USDA's Automated Multiple-Pass Method. Detailed and targeted food-frequency questionnaires have been collected in some NHANES cycles. Dietary supplement use data have been collected (in detail since 2007) so that total nutrient intakes can be described for the population. The continuous NHANES can adapt its content to address emerging public health needs and reflect federal priorities. Changes in data collection methods are made after expert input and validation/crossover studies. NHANES dietary data are used to describe intake of foods, nutrients, food groups, and dietary patterns by the US population and large sociodemographic groups to plan and evaluate nutrition programs and policies. Usual dietary intake distributions can be estimated after adjusting for day-to-day variation. NHANES remains open and flexible to incorporate improvements while maintaining data quality and providing timely data to track the nation's nutrition and health status. In summary, NHANES collects dietary data in the context of its broad, multipurpose goals; the strengths and limitations of these data are also discussed in this review.
美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES)是国家营养监测的基石,为营养与健康政策提供信息。本文重点描述了NHANES中的营养评估,包括饮食数据的收集、分析以及在营养监测中的应用。自20世纪70年代初以来,NHANES通过具有全国代表性的样本进行横断面调查,收集了关于饮食、营养状况和慢性病的全面数据。1999年开始持续数据收集,并每两年发布一次约10000名参与者的公共数据。2002年,个人食物摄入量持续调查与NHANES饮食部分合并,形成了一个统一的饮食数据收集,即“我们在美国吃什么”;从那时起,使用美国农业部的自动多次通过法在两天内收集了24小时回忆法数据。在一些NHANES周期中还收集了详细的针对性食物频率问卷。已经收集了膳食补充剂使用数据(自2007年以来详细收集),以便能够描述人群的总营养素摄入量。持续进行的NHANES能够调整其内容以满足新出现的公共卫生需求,并反映联邦优先事项。在专家意见和验证/交叉研究之后对数据收集方法进行了更改。NHANES饮食数据用于描述美国人群和大型社会人口群体的食物、营养素、食物组和饮食模式的摄入量,以规划和评估营养计划与政策。在调整日常变化后,可以估计通常的饮食摄入量分布。NHANES保持开放和灵活,以纳入改进措施,同时保持数据质量并及时提供数据以跟踪国家的营养与健康状况。总之,NHANES在其广泛的多用途目标背景下收集饮食数据;本综述还讨论了这些数据的优势和局限性。