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    J Am Diet Assoc. 1998 Jan;98(1):40-3.

    Dietary assessment instruments are susceptible to intervention-associated response set bias.

    Source

    Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, WA 98104, USA.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    Evaluations of trials of the effectiveness of dietary intervention programs may be compromised by response set biases, such as those attributable to social desirability. Participants who receive a behavioral intervention may bias their reports of diet to appear in compliance with intervention goals. This study examined whether responses to standard dietary assessment instruments could be affected by a brief dietary intervention.

    DESIGN:

    We assigned 192 undergraduate students randomly to (a) see a 17-minute videotape on the consequences of eating a high-fat diet or a placebo videotape on workplace management and (b) receive preintervention and post-intervention assessments or only postintervention assessment. Dietary assessments included 4 independent measures of fat intake.

    RESULTS:

    Among women, bias (intervention minus control) was -9.7 g fat (from a short food frequency questionnaire) and -0.6 high-fat foods (from a questionnaire about use of 23 foods in the previous day) (P < .05 for both). No results were significant among men or for 2 instruments that measured more qualitative aspects of fat-related dietary habits.

    APPLICATIONS:

    Even a modest dietary intervention can affect responses to dietary assessment instruments. Nutritionists should recognize that assessment of adherence to dietary change recommendations, when based on dietary self-report, can be overestimated as a result of response set biases.

    PMID:
    9434649
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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