1995
DOI: 10.2105/ajph.85.12.1623
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US adults' fruit and vegetable intakes, 1989 to 1991: a revised baseline for the Healthy People 2000 objective.

Abstract: OBJECTIVES. This study provides revised baseline data for the Healthy People 2000 objective related to fruit and vegetable intakes, accounting for fruits and vegetable intakes, accounting for fruits and vegetables from all sources and measuring servings in a manner consistent with current dietary guidance. METHODS. Dietary data from 8181 adults in the US Department of Agriculture's 1989-1991 Continuing Surveys of Food Intakes by Individuals were examined. All foods were disaggregated into their component ingre… Show more

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Cited by 209 publications
(88 citation statements)
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“…More recent data from NHANES III showed that 25% of women and 33% of men reported consuming fewer than 2.5 daily servings of vegetables and fruits (Life Sciences Research Of®ce, 1995). Using the 1989 ± 1991 CSFII, Krebs-Smith et al (1995) reported that American men and women consumed, on average, 4.3 daily servings of vegetables and fruits. Overall, we found that men had a mean intake of 5.7 servings of vegetables and fruit, while women had an average of 4.6 daily servings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recent data from NHANES III showed that 25% of women and 33% of men reported consuming fewer than 2.5 daily servings of vegetables and fruits (Life Sciences Research Of®ce, 1995). Using the 1989 ± 1991 CSFII, Krebs-Smith et al (1995) reported that American men and women consumed, on average, 4.3 daily servings of vegetables and fruits. Overall, we found that men had a mean intake of 5.7 servings of vegetables and fruit, while women had an average of 4.6 daily servings.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They consider only the frequency of consumption in times per day, without taking into account different serving sizes across sites. Accordingly, individuals who consumed fruits and vegetables at recommended frequencies (ie greater than 2 and greater than 3 timesaday, respectively) were de®ned as high consumers (Krebs-Smith et al, 1995;Wright et al, 1994). Basic data on daily individual energy and nutrient intakes were derived from the local dietary assessments (Table 1).…”
Section: Harmonization Of Dietary Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the third study (Krebs-Smith et al, 1995), the proportion of subjects eating 5 or more servings per day was 32.1%. Men had higher consumption than women, and age and education were associated with a higher intake of V&F. When comparing dietary data from different studies, several factors must be taken into account, among them the population from which data are obtained and the instrument used to assess diet.…”
Section: Fruit and Vegetable Intake In Spainmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…One nutrition survey from Spain (Moreno-Sueskun, 1993) was also based on the DH, another was based on both two 24-h recall and one FFQ (Aranzeta et al, 1990), while the remaining survey (Violan et al, 1991) was based on a single 24-h recall carried out over a period of 3 months in the spring±summer season. One study from the United States (Krebs-Smith et al, 1995) was also based on 24-h recall. Both instruments share the disadvantages of methods based on memory.…”
Section: Fruit and Vegetable Intake In Spainmentioning
confidence: 99%