Overview
Dietary surveys are systematic methods for collecting information about food and nutrient intake in individuals or populations, often used to assess nutritional status, identify deficiencies, and evaluate dietary patterns. Research published in the International Journal of Nutrition on this topic addresses diverse applications of dietary assessment across multiple populations and settings. Studies have examined nutritional status among reproductive-age ethnic women in Bangladesh, exploring how socioeconomic and nutritional factors influence dietary adequacy. Other work has investigated vitamin A deficiency disorders in rural preschool children in South India and identified risk factors for stunted growth among children in rural Uganda, demonstrating how dietary surveys inform understanding of malnutrition in vulnerable populations. The journal has also published research evaluating nutrition education interventions, including studies on breakfast cereal programs and their effects on body mass index and diet quality in elementary school children, as well as active choice strategies to improve fruit and vegetable consumption among second-grade students. Additionally, dietary survey methods have been applied in clinical contexts to evaluate nutritional interventions. These investigations underscore the importance of dietary surveys in identifying nutritional gaps, guiding public health interventions, and informing policies to improve population health outcomes across diverse geographic and demographic contexts.
Research published in this journal
7 peer-reviewed articles, ranked by relevance. Each links to its DOI.
Breakfast Cereal and Nutrition Education on Body Mass Index and Diet Quality in Elementary School Children: A Pilot Study
The Impact of Combining Nutrition Education with Active Choice on the Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Among Second Grade Students
Vitamin A deficiency Disorders among the Rural Pre-School Children of South India
Risk Factors for Stunted Growth among Children Aged 6–59 Months in Rural Uganda
Exploration of Beliefs about Exclusive Breastfeeding: An Elicitation study with Low-income Women in South Korea
How this research is being cited
The 7 articles above have been cited 42 times in the scholarly literature. Citation data via OpenAlex and Crossref, updated Jun 2026.
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M. Bambang et al. · 2025 · Malaysian Journal of Medical Sciences
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2025 · SAGE Open Medicine
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2025 · Environmental Health
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2025 · Health Information : Jurnal Penelitian
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Labanya Tripura et al. · 2025 · SAGE Open Medicine
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X. Seposo et al. · 2025 · Environmental Health
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2024 · BMJ Public Health
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2024 · BMJ Public Health
A sample of recent works citing this journal's research on Dietary Surveys, linking to each citing work.