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lifelines_diet_score [2022/06/17 11:09]
laura [Lifelines Diet Score]
lifelines_diet_score [2022/06/17 11:11] (current)
laura [Lifelines Diet Score]
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 The Lifelines Diet Score((Vinke PC, Corpeleijn E, Dekker LH, Jacobs Jr DR, Navis G, Kromhout D. Development of thefood-basedLifelines Diet Score (LLDS) and its application in 129,369 Lifelines participants. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2018.Aug;​72(8):​1111-1119)) is a [[diet scores|diet score]] derived from the completed [[FFQ|FFQ-heart]] filled in by ~130.000 adult [[cohort|Lifelines]] participants at the [[1A|baseline]] assessment ([[1A Questionnaire 2]]) ([[sections|section]]:​ [[Nutrition]] ([[Diet scores]]) and [[secondary & linked variables]]).\\ ​ The Lifelines Diet Score((Vinke PC, Corpeleijn E, Dekker LH, Jacobs Jr DR, Navis G, Kromhout D. Development of thefood-basedLifelines Diet Score (LLDS) and its application in 129,369 Lifelines participants. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition. 2018.Aug;​72(8):​1111-1119)) is a [[diet scores|diet score]] derived from the completed [[FFQ|FFQ-heart]] filled in by ~130.000 adult [[cohort|Lifelines]] participants at the [[1A|baseline]] assessment ([[1A Questionnaire 2]]) ([[sections|section]]:​ [[Nutrition]] ([[Diet scores]]) and [[secondary & linked variables]]).\\ ​
-The LLDS was developed by the UMCG [[https://​www.rug.nl/​research/​epidemiology/?​lang=en|department of epidemiology]] and is a fully food-based and evidence-based tool to assess relative diet quality. Its highest scores represent diets expected to be most beneficial in light of the prevention of nutrition-related chronic diseases. The LLDS is developed for use in scientific research, in which it can both be used  as a primary determinant as well as for adjustment. On the Lifelines data, the [[Dutch Healthy Diet index]] has been developed as well, which is a tool to assess a participant'​s own diet quality and adherence to the 2015 Dutch dietary guidelines.\\+The LLDS was developed by the UMCG [[https://​www.rug.nl/​research/​epidemiology/?​lang=en|department of epidemiology]] and is a fully food-based and evidence-based tool to assess relative diet quality. Its highest scores represent diets expected to be most beneficial in light of the prevention of nutrition-related chronic diseases. The LLDS is developed for use in scientific research, in which it can both be used  as a primary determinant as well as for adjustment. On the Lifelines data, the [[Dutch Healthy Diet index]] has been developed as well, which is a tool to assess a participant'​s own diet quality and adherence to the 2015 Dutch dietary guidelines.
  
 +The LLDS can be requested in the Lifelines catalogue or by mail (data@lifelines.nl).When this data has been used in your research, you will have to include a reference to the the following paper:
 +  * [[https://​doi.org/​10.1038/​s41430-018-0205-z|Vinke,​ P. C., Corpeleijn, E., Dekker, L. H., Jacobs, D. R., Navis, G., & Kromhout, D. (2018). Development of the food-based Lifelines Diet Score (LLDS) and its application in 129,369 Lifelines participants. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 72(8), 1111-1119.]]
 +\\
 ===== Use of the LLDS ===== ===== Use of the LLDS =====
  
lifelines_diet_score.1655456966.txt.gz ยท Last modified: 2022/06/17 11:09 by laura