Dl. Pelletier et Jp. Habicht, CONTINUING NEEDS FOR FOOD-CONSUMPTION DATA FOR PUBLIC-HEALTH POLICY, The Journal of nutrition, 124(9), 1994, pp. 190001846-190001852
There are five broad categories of food-related public health problems
in the U.S. for which survey data on food consumption are needed. The
se relate to reproduction, growth and development, chronic disease, fo
od safety, food insecurity and problems specific to the elderly. The c
ollection and analysis of food consumption data has become increasingl
y difficult for three major reasons. First, broad societal trends (e.g
., ethnicity and use of food away from home) and changes in the food p
roduction, processing and marketing sectors have complicated the task.
Second, the traditional concerns of monitoring (tracking population m
eans and prevalences) are no longer the only objectives; there is a gr
owing demand for data on habitual intake of individuals and variabilit
y in habitual intakes (e.g., to estimate the frequency of acute exposu
res). Third, data are required at several levels of aggregation (e,g.,
nutrients, food categories, commodities and name-brand foods) and a h
igh frequency of non-consumption at lower levels of aggregation places
high demands on sample size. It is suggested that the current large n
ational surveys be supplemented with special purpose surveys that meet
individual agency needs, and that principles and methods of state and
local monitoring be further developed and implemented.