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Observational report describes infrequent fruit and vegetable intake among US young children

Observational report describes infrequent fruit and vegetable intake among US young children
Photo by Ruth Alarcon / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Note descriptive report of infrequent fruit/vegetable intake in US children; lacks quantitative data.

An observational report examined fruit, vegetable, and sugar-sweetened beverage intake among young children in the United States. The report described infrequent intake of fruits and vegetables in this population. No specific intervention, comparator, sample size, or quantitative results were provided.

No safety, tolerability, or adverse event data were reported for this descriptive analysis. The study design did not include a follow-up period or primary outcome measures.

Key limitations include the lack of reported methodology, sample size, statistical measures, and comparative data. The absence of effect sizes, confidence intervals, or p-values prevents assessment of the finding's magnitude or significance.

The practice relevance of this report is limited to raising awareness of a described dietary pattern. As an observational description without comparative or longitudinal data, it cannot inform causal relationships or specific clinical interventions.

Study Details

EvidenceLevel 5
PublishedFeb 2023
View Original Abstract ↓
This report describes infrequent intake of fruits and vegetables among young children in the United States.
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