Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5601552 | Current Problems in Cardiology | 2016 | 41 Pages |
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the validity of the 1971-2010 United States Department of Agriculture's (USDA's) loss-adjusted food availability (LAFA) per capita caloric consumption estimates. Estimated total daily energy expenditure (TEE) was calculated for nationally representative samples of US adults, 20-74 years, using the Institute of Medicine's predictive equations with “low-active” (TEE L-ACT) and “sedentary” (TEE SED) physical activity values. TEE estimates were subtracted from LAFA estimates to create disparity values (kcal/d). A validated mathematical model was applied to calculate expected weight change in reference individuals resulting from the disparity. From 1971-2010, the disparity between LAFA and TEE L-ACT varied by 394Â kcal/d-(P < 0.001), from â205Â kcal/d (95% CI: â214, â196) to +189Â kcal/d (95% CI: 168, 209). The disparity between LAFA and TEE SED varied by 412Â kcal/d (P < 0.001), from â84Â kcal/d (95% CI: â93, â76) to +328Â kcal/d (95% CI: 309, 348). Our model suggests that if LAFA estimates were actually consumed, reference individuals would have lost ~1-4Â kg/y from 1971-1980 (an accumulated loss of ~12 to ~36Â kg), and gained ~3-7Â kg/y from 1988-2010 (an accumulated gain of ~42 to ~98Â kg). These estimates differed from the actual measured increments of 10Â kg and 9Â kg in reference men and women, respectively, over the 39-year period. The USDA LAFA data provided inconsistent, divergent estimates of per capita caloric consumption over its 39-year history. The large, variable misestimation suggests that the USDA LAFA per capita caloric intake estimates lack validity and should not be used to inform public policy.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine
Authors
Edward PhD, MS, Diana M. PhD, Samantha M. MS, Gregory PhD, Carl J. MD, James O. PhD, Steven N. PED,