TY - JOUR AU - Louie J. AU - Thomas B. AU - Wu J. AU - Gill T. AU - Flood V. AU - Rangan A. AU - Cleanthous X. AU - Zheng M. AU - Neal Bruce AB -

Considerable evidence has associated increasing portion sizes with elevated obesity prevalence. This study examines typical portion sizes of commonly consumed core and discretionary foods in Australian adults, and compares these data with the Australian Dietary Guidelines standard serves. Typical portion sizes are defined as the median amount of foods consumed per eating occasion. Sex- and age-specific median portion sizes of adults aged 19 years and over (n = 9341) were analysed using one day 24 hour recall data from the 2011-12 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey. A total of 152 food categories were examined. There were significant sex and age differences in typical portion sizes among a large proportion of food categories studied. Typical portion sizes of breads and cereals, meat and chicken cuts, and starchy vegetables were 30-160% larger than the standard serves, whereas, the portion sizes of dairy products, some fruits, and non-starchy vegetables were 30-90% smaller. Typical portion sizes for discretionary foods such as cakes, ice-cream, sausages, hamburgers, pizza, and alcoholic drinks exceeded the standard serves by 40-400%. The findings of the present study are particularly relevant for establishing Australian-specific reference portions for dietary assessment tools, refinement of nutrition labelling and public health policies.

AD - School of Molecular Bioscience, Charles Perkins Centre, The University of Sydney, Sydney NSW Australia.
The George Institute for Global Health, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Camperdown NSW Australia.
Faculty of Health Sciences, The University of Sydney, Sydney NSW Australia.
St Vincent's Hospital, Darlinghurst NSW Australia.
Boden Institute of Obesity, Nutrition, Exercise and Eating Disorders, The University of Sydney, Sydney NSW Australia.
National Heart Foundation of Australia, Melbourne VIC Australia. AN - 26786684 BT - Scientific Reports C2 - PMC4726402 DA - 93657095517 DP - NLM ET - 2016/01/21 LA - eng LB - AUS
FP
FY16 N1 - Zheng, Miaobing
Wu, Jason H Y
Louie, Jimmy Chun Yu
Flood, Victoria M
Gill, Tim
Thomas, Beth
Cleanthous, Xenia
Neal, Bruce
Rangan, Anna
England
Sci Rep. 2016 Jan 20;6:19596. doi: 10.1038/srep19596. N2 -

Considerable evidence has associated increasing portion sizes with elevated obesity prevalence. This study examines typical portion sizes of commonly consumed core and discretionary foods in Australian adults, and compares these data with the Australian Dietary Guidelines standard serves. Typical portion sizes are defined as the median amount of foods consumed per eating occasion. Sex- and age-specific median portion sizes of adults aged 19 years and over (n = 9341) were analysed using one day 24 hour recall data from the 2011-12 National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey. A total of 152 food categories were examined. There were significant sex and age differences in typical portion sizes among a large proportion of food categories studied. Typical portion sizes of breads and cereals, meat and chicken cuts, and starchy vegetables were 30-160% larger than the standard serves, whereas, the portion sizes of dairy products, some fruits, and non-starchy vegetables were 30-90% smaller. Typical portion sizes for discretionary foods such as cakes, ice-cream, sausages, hamburgers, pizza, and alcoholic drinks exceeded the standard serves by 40-400%. The findings of the present study are particularly relevant for establishing Australian-specific reference portions for dietary assessment tools, refinement of nutrition labelling and public health policies.

PY - 2016 SN - 2045-2322 (Electronic)
2045-2322 (Linking) EP - 19596 T2 - Scientific Reports TI - Typical food portion sizes consumed by Australian adults: results from the 2011-12 Australian National Nutrition and Physical Activity Survey VL - 6 Y2 - FY16 ER -