microwave13016
microwave13016
11.06.2020 • 
Social Studies

Several versions of the FFQ exist, but they all use a similar technique: Ask people how often they eat particular foods and what serving size they usually consume. But it’s not always easy to remember everything you ate, even what you ate yesterday. People are prone to underreport what they consume, and they may not fess up to eating certain foods or may miscalculate their serving sizes." "When I tried keeping a seven-day food diary, I discovered … it’s surprisingly difficult to capture a record that reflects normal eating patterns when you collect only a few days’ worth of data. It so happened that I was traveling to a conference during my diary week, so I ate packaged snacks and restaurant meals far different from the foods I usually eat from my garden at home. My diary showed that before dinner one day, I’d eaten only a doughnut and two snack packs of potato chips. And what did I have for dinner? I can tell you that it was a delicious Indonesian seafood curry, but I couldn’t possibly begin to list all its ingredients."
When asked to report their behavior, people may not have access to the information (forget or never knew it) or they may deliberately lie. Fill in the following blanks with either 'no access' or 'lie'
1) "it’s not always easy to remember everything you ate"
A) no access
B) lie
2) "People are prone to underreport what they consume"
A) no access
B) lie
3) "they may not fess up to eating certain foods"
A) no access
B) lie
4) "may miscalculate their serving sizes."
A) no access
B) lie
5) "I can tell you that it was a delicious Indonesian seafood curry, but I couldn’t possibly begin to list all its ingredients."
A) no access
B) lie

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