Systematic review of metrics used to characterise dietary nutrient supply from household consumption and expenditure surveys.
Tang, Kevin;
Adams, Katherine P;
Ferguson, Elaine L;
Woldt, Monica;
Yourkavitch, Jennifer;
Pedersen, Sarah;
Broadley, Martin R;
Dary, Omar;
Ander, E Louise;
Joy, Edward Jm;
(2022)
Systematic review of metrics used to characterise dietary nutrient supply from household consumption and expenditure surveys.
Public health nutrition, 25 (5).
pp. 1-13.
ISSN 1368-9800
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980022000118
Permanent Identifier
Use this Digital Object Identifier when citing or linking to this resource.
OBJECTIVE: To review existing publications using Household Consumption and Expenditure Survey (HCES) data to estimate household dietary nutrient supply to (1) describe scope of available literature, (2) identify the metrics reported and parameters used to construct these metrics, (3) summarise comparisons between estimates derived from HCES and individual dietary assessment data and (4) explore the demographic and socio-economic sub-groups used to characterise risks of nutrient inadequacy. DESIGN: This study is a systematic review of publications identified from online databases published between 2000 to 2019 that used HCES food consumption data to estimate household dietary nutrient supply. Further publications were identified by 'snowballing' the references of included database-identified publications. SETTING: Publications using data from low- and lower-middle income countries. RESULTS: In total, fifty-eight publications were included. Three metrics were reported that characterised household dietary nutrient supply: apparent nutrient intake per adult-male equivalent per day (n 35), apparent nutrient intake per capita per day (n 24) and nutrient density (n 5). Nutrient intakes were generally overestimated using HCES food consumption data, with several studies finding sizeable discrepancies compared with intake estimates based on individual dietary assessment methods. Sub-group analyses predominantly focused on measuring variation in household dietary nutrient supply according to socio-economic position and geography. CONCLUSION: HCES data are increasingly being used to assess diets across populations. More research is needed to inform the development of a framework to guide the use of and qualified interpretation of dietary assessments based on these data.