Micronutrient intakes and the role of nutritional supplements in the diets of Irish adults and pre-school children
| Contribuinte(s) |
Flynn, Albert Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland |
|---|---|
| Data(s) |
13/01/2014
2013
2013
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| Resumo |
To investigate micronutrient intakes and the role of nutritional supplements in the diets of Irish adults aged 18-64 years and pre-school children aged 1-4 years. Analysis is based on data from the National Adult Nutrition Survey (NANS) (n=1274) and the National Pre-School Nutrition Survey (NPNS) (n=500). Food and beverage intakes and nutritional supplement use were recorded using 4-day food records. Nutrients were estimated using WISP© which is based on McCance and Widdowson’s The Composition of Foods, 6thEd and the Irish Food Composition Database. “Meats”, “milk/yoghurt”, “breads”, “fruit/fruit juices” and “breakfast cereals” made important contributions to the intakes of a number of micronutrients. Micronutrient intakes were generally adequate, with the exception of iron (in adult females and 1 year olds) and vitamin D (in all population groups). For iron, zinc, copper and vitamin B6, up to 2% of adults had intakes that exceeded the upper limit (UL). Small proportions of children had intakes of zinc (11%), copper (2%), retinol (4%) and folic acid (5%) exceeding the UL. Nutritional supplements (predominantly multivitamin and/or mineral preparations) were consumed by 28% of adults and 20% of pre-school children. Among users, supplements were effective in reducing the % with inadequate intakes for vitamins A and D (both population groups) and iron (adult females only). Supplement users had a lower prevalence of inadequate intakes for vitamin A and iron compared to non-users. In adults only, users had a lower prevalence of inadequate intakes for magnesium, calcium and zinc, and displayed better compliance with dietary recommendations and lifestyle characteristics compared with non-users. There is poor compliance among women of childbearing age for the recommendation to take a supplement containing 400µg/day of folic acid. These findings are important for the development of nutrition policies and future recommendations for adults and pre-school children in Ireland and the EU. Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland (07/FHRI/UCC/2, National Food Consumption Databases) Accepted Version Not peer reviewed |
| Formato |
application/pdf |
| Identificador |
Browne, F. A. 2013. Micronutrient intakes and the role of nutritional supplements in the diets of Irish adults and pre-school children. PhD Thesis, University College Cork. |
| Idioma(s) |
en en |
| Publicador |
University College Cork |
| Direitos |
© 2013, Fiona A. Browne http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ |
| Palavras-Chave | #18-64 year old adults #Nutritional supplements #Pre-school children #Micronutrient intakes #Children--Nutrition #Vitamins in human nutrition |
| Tipo |
Doctoral thesis Doctoral PhD (Food Science and Technology) |