Introduction to Human Nutrition

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316 Introduction to Human Nutrition


factors adequately is impossible. However, if they are
recorded, then, when the data are being evaluated on
a statistical basis, they can be included to ascertain
their effect on the measured outcome, bone mineral
density. To accomplish this aim, multivariate methods
such as multiple regression or logistic regression
should be used (see Section 13.2).


13.6 Epidemiological designs


Epidemiology is a health-related science dealing with
the distribution and determinants of health and
illness in populations. Nutritional epidemiology inte-
grates the knowledge derived from nutrition research,
to examine diet–disease relationships at the level of
free-living populations. Nutritional epidemiology
provides scientifi c evidence to understand the role of
nutrition in the cause and prevention of disease.
The comparison and choice of different epidemio-
logical study designs depends on exposure measures,
outcome measures, costs, and expected length of
follow-up. The selection of a study method is often
infl uenced by pragmatic issues such as feasibility,
as well as by ethical questions.
Epidemiological studies can be divided into two
broad categories (Figure 13.2): experimental and
nonexperimental (observational) studies. Observa-
tional studies can be further divided into descriptive
and analytical studies. In a wide sense, an experiment
is a set of observations, conducted under controlled


circumstances, in which the scientist manipulates the
conditions to ascertain the effect of such manipula-
tion on the observations.

Experimental studies in
nutritional epidemiology
It is necessary to consider that in biological experi-
mentation, it is not possible for the scientist to control
completely all of the relevant circumstances, and the
manipulation will consist of increasing at most the
degree of variation in the factor that the scientist is
investigating. The ideal will be to obtain two almost
identical sets of circumstances where all factors are
the same. If a strong variation is then introduced in
only one of these factors, all of the observed differ-
ences between the two sets that occurred thereafter
would be causally attributed to the single factor that
the investigator had manipulated.
Experimental epidemiological designs are those in
which the investigator assigns the exposure to each
subject. In these studies, the treatment (or exposure)
is assigned with the aim of attaining maximum com-
parability between treated and untreated groups
regarding all other characteristics of the subjects apart
from the treatment or exposure of interest. In epide-
miological research, the best way to achieve identical
sets of circumstances is to assign subjects randomly
to exposure (treatment) or control groups. This
process is called randomization. All randomized
studies are experimental designs.
Exposure, from an epidemiological point of view,
describes lifestyle or environmental factors that may
be relevant to health. Outcome is another generic
term used to describe the health-related events or
variables that are being studied in relation to the
effect of an exposure. In nutritional epidemiology, the
primary exposure of interest is dietary intake, whereas
outcome measures usually involve disease occurrence
or nutritional status indicators (anthropometry,
clinical signs of disease/health status, biological or
physiological measures or dietary habits).
It is also possible to design experimental studies
assigning whole population groups to different expo-
sures. These studies are called community trials.
For example, if a whole town is assigned to receive
an educational program about healthy eating and
another neighboring town is assigned to control (no
educational program), this would be a community
trial; when randomization is used, it is termed “cluster-

Clinical trial
Field trial
Community trial

Intervention trial
(quasi-experiment)

Cohort
Analytical

Descriptive

No

Yes

Yes

Randomization

Nonexperimental
(observational)

Experimental

Case–control

Cross-sectional
(prevalence)

Ecological
(correlation)

Assignment of
exposure by
investigator

No

Figure 13.2 Classifi cation of epidemiological designs.

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