We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Development of an Athlete Diet Index for Rapid Dietary Assessment of Athletes.
- Authors
Capling, Louise; Beck, Kathryn L.; Slater, Gary J.; Gifford, Janelle A.; Flood, Victoria M.; Denyer, Gareth S.; O'Connor, Helen T.
- Abstract
Food-based diet indices provide a practical, rapid, and inexpensive way of evaluating dietary intake. Rather than nutrients, diet indices assess the intake of whole foods and dietary patterns, and compare these with nutrition guidelines. An athlete-specific diet index would offer an efficient and practical way to assess the quality of athletes' diets, guide nutrition interventions, and focus sport nutrition support. This study describes the development and validation of an Athlete Diet Index (ADI). Item development was informed by a review of existing diet indices, relevant literature, and in-depth focus groups with 20 sports nutritionists (median of 11 years' professional experience) from four elite athlete sporting institutes. Focus group data were analyzed (NVivo 11 Pro; QSR International Pty. Ltd., 2017,Melbourne, Australia), and key themes were identified to guide the development of athlete-relevant items. A modified Delphi survey in a subgroup of sports nutritionists (n = 9) supported item content validation. Pilot testing with athletes (n = 15) subsequently informed face validity. The final ADI (n = 68 items) was categorized into three sections. Section A (n = 45 items) evaluated usual intake, special diets or intolerances, dietary habits, and culinary skills. Section B (n = 15 items) assessed training load, nutrition supporting training, and sports supplement use. Section C (n = 8 items) captured the demographic details, sporting type, and caliber. All of the athletes reported the ADI as easy (40%) or very easy (60%of participants) to use and rated the tool as relevant (37%) or very relevant (63% of participants) to athletes. Further evaluation of the ADI, including the development of a scoring matrix and validation compared with established dietary methodology, is warranted.
- Subjects
SPORTS nutrition; DIET; EXPERIMENTAL design; FOCUS groups; FOOD habits; INGESTION; RESEARCH methodology; NUTRITIONAL assessment; SPORTS facilities; EMPLOYEES' workload; PHYSICAL training &; conditioning; RESEARCH methodology evaluation; WORK experience (Employment)
- Publication
International Journal of Sport Nutrition & Exercise Metabolism, 2019, Vol 29, Issue 6, p643
- ISSN
1526-484X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1123/ijsnem.2019-0098