Nutrients (Dec 2018)

Validity of the Mediterranean Diet and Culinary Index (MediCul) for Online Assessment of Adherence to the ‘Traditional’ Diet and Aspects of Cuisine in Older Adults

  • Sue Radd-Vagenas,
  • Maria A. Fiatarone Singh,
  • Kenneth Daniel,
  • Yian Noble,
  • Nidhi Jain,
  • Fiona O’Leary,
  • Yorgi Mavros,
  • Megan Heffernan,
  • Jacinda Meiklejohn,
  • Yareni Guerrero,
  • Tiffany Chau,
  • Perminder S. Sachdev,
  • Henry Brodaty,
  • Victoria M. Flood

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10121913
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 12
p. 1913

Abstract

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The Mediterranean diet is associated with multiple health benefits. Yet, no tool has been specifically developed to assess adherence to the ‘traditional’ Mediterranean diet and cuisine within a Western cohort, and validated for online use. We tested the reliability and validity of online administration of the Mediterranean Diet and Culinary Index (MediCul) among middle-aged and older adults. Participants were recruited in January⁻March 2017 from the 45 and Up Study, completing MediCul twice. Test-retest reliability was assessed using the paired t-test, intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and Bland-Altman plot. Validity was tested against a three-day food record (FR)-derived MediCul score using Bland-Altman and nutrient trends across the MediCul score tertiles. Participants (n = 84; 60% female; 65.4 years (SD = 5.9)), were overweight (BMI 26.1; SD = 4.0) with 1.7 (SD = 1.5) chronic illnesses/conditions. Sequential MediCul tool scores were 56.1/100.0 and 56.8/100.0, respectively (t = −1.019; p = 0.311). Reliability via ICC (ICC = 0.86, 95% CI: 0.789, 0.910, p < 0.0001) and Bland-Altman was good. In Bland-Altman validity analyses, the tool over-reported FR MediCul score by 5.6 points with no systematic bias ((y = 8.7 − 0.06*x) (95% CI: −0.278, 0.158, p = 0.584)). Nutrient trends were identified for MediCul consistent with expected Mediterranean patterns. Online MediCul administration demonstrated good reliability and moderate validity for assessing adherence to a ‘traditional’ Mediterranean pattern among older Australians.

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