Litcius/Paper detail

Dietary supplement use in Greece: methodology and findings from the National Health and Nutrition Survey – HYDRIA (2013–2014)

Anastasia Kanellou, Eleni‐Maria Papatesta, Georgia Martimianaki, Eleni Peppa, Maria Stratou, Antonia Trichopoulou

2022British Journal Of Nutrition10 citationsDOI

Abstract

4011, 1873 males and 2138 females) aged > 18 years old living in Greece were included in the 2013-2014 National Health and Nutrition Survey - HYDRIA. A dietary supplement user (DSU) was defined as anyone who reported one or more DS on either a Food Propensity Questionnaire, two 24-h dietary recalls, or a questionnaire completed during the blood sample collection examination. DS use was examined according to socio-economic, anthropometric and lifestyle characteristics and the participants' health and dietary status. DS use was reported by 31 % of the population (40 % women and 22 % men), and it was higher among individuals living in urban areas, men with good self-reported health status and women with a chronic medical condition and higher consumption of fruits. The types of DS more frequently reported were multivitamins with minerals (5·4 %), Ca (5·3 %), multivitamins (4·7 %) and Fe (4·6 %). MVM supplements were preferred by men, while Ca was more frequently reported by women and participants with low education levels. Plant- and oil-based supplement use was below 5 %. Whether DS intake benefits health must be explored. It should also be assessed if dietary supplement intake is as efficient as food intake.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineNational Health and Nutrition Examination SurveyAnthropometryEnvironmental healthPopulationGerontologyFortified FoodSocioeconomic statusVitaminInternal medicineAntioxidant Activity and Oxidative StressConsumer Attitudes and Food LabelingNutritional Studies and Diet