JMIR mHealth and uHealth (Sep 2024)

Reliability Issues of Mobile Nutrition Apps for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention: Comparative Study

  • Dang Khanh Ngan Ho,
  • Wan-Chun Chiu,
  • Jing-Wen Kao,
  • Hsiang-Tung Tseng,
  • Cheng-Yu Lin,
  • Pin-Hsiang Huang,
  • Yu-Ren Fang,
  • Kuei-Hung Chen,
  • Ting-Ying Su,
  • Chia-Hui Yang,
  • Chih-Yuan Yao,
  • Hsiu-Yueh Su,
  • Pin-Hui Wei,
  • Jung-Su Chang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/54509
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. e54509 – e54509

Abstract

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Abstract BackgroundControlling saturated fat and cholesterol intake is important for the prevention of cardiovascular diseases. Although the use of mobile diet-tracking apps has been increasing, the reliability of nutrition apps in tracking saturated fats and cholesterol across different nations remains underexplored. ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine the reliability and consistency of nutrition apps focusing on saturated fat and cholesterol intake across different national contexts. The study focused on 3 key concerns: data omission, inconsistency (variability) of saturated fat and cholesterol values within an app, and the reliability of commercial apps across different national contexts. MethodsNutrient data from 4 consumer-grade apps (COFIT, MyFitnessPal-Chinese, MyFitnessPal-English, and LoseIt!) and an academic app (Formosa FoodApp) were compared against 2 national reference databases (US Department of Agriculture [USDA]–Food and Nutrient Database for Dietary Studies [FNDDS] and Taiwan Food Composition Database [FCD]). Percentages of missing nutrients were recorded, and coefficients of variation were used to compute data inconsistencies. One-way ANOVAs were used to examine differences among apps, and paired 2-tailed t ResultsAcross the 5 apps, 836 food codes from 42 items were analyzed. Four apps, including COFIT, MyFitnessPal-Chinese, MyFitnessPal-English, and LoseIt!, significantly underestimated saturated fats, with errors ranging from −13.8% to −40.3% (all PP< ConclusionsThe findings reveal substantial inaccuracies and inconsistencies in diet-tracking apps’ reporting of saturated fats and cholesterol. These issues raise concerns for the effectiveness of using consumer-grade nutrition apps in cardiovascular disease prevention across different national contexts and within the apps themselves.