Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-dk4vv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T16:32:39.982Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Trends in individual fat consumption in the UK 1900–1985

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2007

Alison M. Stephen
Affiliation:
Division of Nutrition and Dietetics, College of Pharmacy, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 0 WO, Canada
Glynis M. Sieber
Affiliation:
Division of Nutrition and Dietetics, College of Pharmacy, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 0 WO, Canada
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Mortality from coronary heart disease is decreasing in a number of Western countries, although the pattern of the decrease differs from country to country. In the UK the mortality rate from coronary heart disease has declined since 1979, whereas in the USA mortality from this disease began to fall in 1968 and has continued since that time. Of many factors suggested as reasons for the decline, diet has been implicated, particularly dietary fat intake. However, food balance information suggests little change in fat intake. A recent examination of all published studies from the USA where individual fat intake has been reported indicated that fat intake in that country has fallen steadily since the mid 1960s. The present study describes a similar compilation of all published studies from the UK giving individual fat intakes. Ninety-seven studies, representing information for 24045 individuals, were used. Studies ranged in size from two to 3581 individuals and were drawn from all regions of the UK. Most studies used 7 d weighed intakes as the method of dietary assessment. Quadratic regression equations were applied to the fat intakes from all studies over time, with each study weighted by the number of individuals surveyed. Data were also divided into 10-year periods and weighted fat intakes for each decade were calculated. Data were expressed for all studies, then subdivided into males, females, children and the elderly. Comparisons between Scotland and the South-East of England were made. Results indicate that fat represented 30% or less of dietary energy in the UK until the 1930s, when it began to rise. This rise was curtailed by rationing during and after the Second World War, after which the rise continued, reaching a plateau of about 40% energy in the late 1950s, with little change until the late 1970s. Trends were similar in all age-groups, but less change has occurred recently in Scotland compared with South-East England. These results differ from the pattern in the USA and suggest that if greater changes in mortality from coronary heart disease are to be seen in the UK a greater reduction in dietary fat intake will have to occur.

Type
Estimates of Fat Intake by Populations
Copyright
Copyright © The Nutrition Society 1994

References

Akinrefon, O. O. (1976). Nutrition survey of an old people's home in a London borough. Journal of Human Nutrition 30, 1925.Google Scholar
American Heart Association (1986). Position statement. Dietary guidelines for healthy American adults. statement for physicians and health professionals by the Nutrition Committee, American Heart Association Circulation 74, 1465A–1468A.Google Scholar
Barasi, M. E., Phillips, K. M. & Burr, M. L. (1985). A weighed dietary survey of women in South Wales. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 39A, 189194.Google Scholar
Barker, M. E., McKenna, P. G., Reid, N. G., Strain, J. J., Thompson, K. A., Williamson, A. P. & Wright, M. (1988). A comparison of the PETRA food recording system with the conventional weighed inventory technique. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 1, 179186.Google Scholar
Bedale, E. M. (1923). Energy expenditure and food requirements of children at school. Proceedings of rhe Royal Society B 94, 368404.Google Scholar
Berry, W. T. C., Beveridge, J. B., Bransby, E. R., Chalmers, A. K., Needham, B. M., Magee, H. E., Townsend, H. S. & Daubney, C. G. (1949). The diet, haemoglobin values and blood pressures of Olympic athletes. British Medical Journal 1, 300304.Google Scholar
Bingham, S., McNeil, N. I. & Cummings, J. H. (1981). The diet of individuals: A study of a randomly-chosen cross section of British adults in a Cambridgeshire village. British Journal of Nutrition 45, 2335.Google Scholar
Bird, G.& Elwood, P. C. (1983). The dietary intakes of subjects estimated from photographs compared with weighed record. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 37A, 470473.Google Scholar
Black, A. E., Billewicz, W. Z. & Thompson, A. M. (1976). The diets of preschool children in Newcastie Upon Tyne 1968–71. British Journal of Nutrition 35, 105113.Google Scholar
Black, A. E., Ravenscroft, C. & Paul, A. A. (1985). Footnotes to food tables: I. Differences in nutrient intakes of dietitians as calculated from the DHSS food tables and the fourth edition of McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods. Hurnan Nutrition :Applied Nutrition 39A, 918.Google Scholar
Black, A. E., Ravenscroft, C. & Sims, A. J. (1984). The NACNE Report: are the dietary goals realistic? Comparisons with the dietary patterns of dietitians. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 38A, 165179.Google Scholar
Black, A. E., Wiles, S. J. & Paul, A. A. (1986). The nutrient intakes of pregnant and lactating mothers of good socio-economic status in Cambridge, UK : Some implications for recommended daily allowances of minor nutrients. British Journal of Nutrition 56, 5972.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bradley, A. & Theobald, A. (1988). The effects of dietary modification as defined by NACNE on the eating habits of 28 people. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 1, 105114.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bransby, E. R. (1946). The diets of families with children in 1941. British Medical Journal 1, 832835.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bransby, E. R., Daubney, C. G. & King, J. (1948a). Comparison of results obtained by different methods of individual dietary survey. British Journal of Nutrition 2, 89110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bransby, E. R., Daubney, C. G. & King, J. (1948b). Comparison of nutrient values of individual diets found by calculation from food tables and by chemical analysis. British Journal of Nutrition 2, 232236.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bransby, E. R. & Fothergill, J. E. (1954). The diets of young children. British Journal of Nutrition 8, 195204.Google Scholar
Bransby, E. R. & Osborne, B. (1953). A social and food survey of the elderly, living alone or as married couples. British Journal of Nutrition 1, 160180.Google Scholar
Bransby, E. R. & Wagner, G. (1945). The diets of school children in two industrial towns. British Medical Journal 2, 682685.Google Scholar
Bull, N. & Barber, S. A. (1984). Food and nutrient intakes of vegetarians in Britain. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 38A, 288293.Google Scholar
Bull, N. L., Smart, G. A. & Judson, H. (1982). Food and nutrient intakes on Westray in the Orkney Islands. Ecology of Food and Nutrition 12, 97101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bull, N. L. & Wheeler, E. F. (1986). A study of different dietary survey methods among 30 civil servants. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 40A, 6066.Google Scholar
Cade, J. E. (1988). Are diet records using household measures comparable to weighed intakes? Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 1, 171178.Google Scholar
Cade, J. E., Barker, D. J. P., Margetts, B. M. & Morris, J. A. (1988). Diet and inequalities in health in three English towns. British Medical Journal 296, 13591362.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cameron, C. S. & Graham, S. (1944). Antenatal diet and its influence on stillbirths and prematurity. Glasgow Medical Journal 24, 17.Google Scholar
Cathcart, E. P. & Murray, A. M. T. (1932). Studies in Nutrition. An Inquiry into the Diet of Families in Cardiffund Reuding. MRC Special Report Series no. 165. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Cathcart, E. P. & Murray, A. M. T. (1936). A Dietary Survey in Terms of the Actual Foodstufls Consumed. MRC Special Report Series no. 218. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Chappell, G. M. (1955). Long-term individual dietary surveys. British Journal of Nutrition 9, 323339.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Charles, J. A. (1937). A study of the diets of 69 working class families in Newcastle Upon Tyne. Nutrition Abstracts & Reviews 6, 1057.Google Scholar
Clark, M. L. (1933). Family diet coefficients. British Medical Journal 2, 977979.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cole-Hamilton, I., Gunner, K., Leverkus, C. & Starr, J. (1986). A study among dietitians and adult members of their households of the practicalities and implications of following proposed dietary guidelines for the U.K. Huinan Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 40A, 365389.Google Scholar
Cook, J., Altman, D. G., Moore, D. M. C., Topp, S. G., Holland, W. W. & Elliott, A. (1973). A survey of the nutritional status of schoolchildren. Relation between nutrient intake and socio-economic factors. British Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine 21, 9199.Google Scholar
Cook, R. P. (1948). The dietary intake of a class of students. British Medical Journal 2, 711.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Crawford, M. A., Doyle, W., Craft, I. L. & Laurance, B. M. (1986). A comparison of food intake during pregnancy and birthweight in high and low socioeconomic groups. Progress in Lipid Research 25, 249254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, W. B., Hayes, C. G., Knowles, M., Riggan, W. B., Van Braggen, J. & Tyroler, H. A. (1985). Geographic variation in declining ischemic heart disease mortality in the United States 1968–1978. American Journal of Epideiniology 122, 657672.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Darke, S. J., Disselduff, M. M. & Try, G. P. (1980 a).A nutrition survey of children from one-parent families in Newcastle Upon Tyne in 1970. British Journal of Nutrition 44, 237241.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Darke, S. J., Disselduff, M. M. &Try, G. P. (1980 b). Frequency distributions of mean daily intakes of food energy and selected nutrients obtained during nutrition surveys of different groups of people in Great Britain between 1968 and 1971. British Journal of Nutrition 44, 243252.Google Scholar
Davies, L. & Holdsworth, M. D. (1985). Nutrition and health at retirement age in the United Kingdom. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 39A, 315332.Google Scholar
Department of Health and Social Security (1972). A Nutrition Survey of the Elderly. Reports on Health and Social Subjects no. 3, pp. 1101. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Department of Health and Social Security (1975). A Nutrition Survey of Pre-school Children 1967–68. Report on Health and Social Subjects no. 10, pp. 151. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Department of Health Committee on Medical Aspects of Food Policy (1989). The Diets ofBritish Srhoolchi/dren. Report on Health and Social Subjects no. 36, pp. 1235. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Doyle, W., Crawford, M. A., Laurance, B. M. & Drury, P. (1982). Dietary survey during pregnancy in a low socio-economic group. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 36A, 95106.Google Scholar
Durnin, J. V. G. A., Blake, E. C., Allan, M. K., Shaw, E. J. & Blair, S. (1961 a). Food intake and energy expenditure of elderly women with varying-sized families. Journal of Nutrition 75, 7376.Google Scholar
Durnin, J. V. G. A., Blake, E. C., Allan, M. K., Shaw, E. J., Wilson, E. A., Blair, S. & Yuill, S. A. (1961 b). The food intake and energy expenditure of some elderly men working in heavy and light engineering. British Journal of Nutrition 15, 587591.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Durnin, J. V. G. A., Blake, E. C. & Brockway, J. M. (1957). The energy expenditure and food intake of middle- aged Glasgow housewives and their adult daughters. British Journal of Nutrition 11, 8594.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Durnin, J. V. G. A., Blake, E. C., Brockway, J. M. & Drury, E. A. (1961 a). The food intake and energy expenditure of elderly women living alone. British Journal of Nutrition 15, 499506.Google Scholar
Durnin, J. V. G. A., Lonergan, M. E., Good, J. & Ewan, A. (1974). A cross-sectional nutritional and anthropometric study, with an interval of 7 years, on 61 1 young adolescent schoolchildren. British Journal of Nutrition 32, 169179.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Exton-Smith, A. N., Stanton, B. R. & Windsor, A. C. M. (1972). Nutrition of Housebound Old People, pp. 523, 3343. London: King Edward's Hospital Fund for London.Google Scholar
Fehily, A. M. & Bird, G. (1986). The dietary intakes of women in Caerphilly, South Wales: A weighed and a photographic method compared. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 40A, 300307.Google Scholar
Fehily, A. M., Phillips, K. M. & Sweetnam, P. M. (1984 a). A weighed dietary survey of men in Caerphilly, South Wales. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 38A, 270276.Google Scholar
Fehily, A. M., Phillips, K. M. & Yarnell, J. W. G. (1984 b). Diet, smoking, social class, and body mass index in the Caerphilly heart disease study. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 40, 827833.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fehily, A. M., Yarnell, J. W. G., Bolton, C. H. & Butland, B. K. (1988). Dietary determinants of plasma lipids and lipoproteins: the Caerphilly study. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition 42, 405413.Google ScholarPubMed
Ferguson, M. (1916). The family budgets and dietaries of forty labouring class families in Glasgow in wartime. Proceedings of Royal Society of Edinburgh 37, 117136.Google Scholar
Ferguson, M. (1919). The diets of labouring class families during the course of the war. Journal of Hygiene 18, 409416.Google Scholar
Fry, L. S. & Myers, S. (1938). A physiological study of the diets of 15 rural workers' families in Essex. Public Health 51, 358363.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hackett, A. F., Rugg-Gunn, A. J. & Appleton, D. R. (1983). Use of a dietary diary and interview to estimate the food intake of children. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 37A, 293300.Google Scholar
Hackett, A. F., Rugg-Gunn, A. J., Appleton, D. R., Eastoe, J. E. & Jenkins, G. N. (1984a). A 2-year longitudinal nutritional survey of 405 Northumberland children initially aged 11.5 years. British Journal of Nutrition 51, 6775.Google Scholar
Hackett, A. F., Rugg-Gum, A. J., Appleton, D. R., Parkin, J. M. & Eastoe, J. E. (1984b). A two-year longitudinal study of dietary intake iri relation to the growth of 405 English children initially aged 11–12 years. Annals of Human Biology 11, 545553.Google Scholar
Health and Welfare Canada (1990). Nutrition Recommendutions... A Cull for Action. The Report of the Scientlfic Review. Ottawa: Canadian Government Publishing Centre.Google Scholar
Heller, R. F., Hayward, D. & Hobbs, M. S. T. (1983). Decline in rate of death from ischaemic heart disease in the United Kingdom. British Medical Journal 286, 260262.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hill, A. B. (1925 a).Internal Migration and Its Eflects upon the Death-rates: With Special Reference to the Count), of Essex. MRC Special Report Series no. 95. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Hill, A. B. (1925 b). A physiological and economic study of the diets of workers in rural areas as compared with those of workers resident in urban districts. Journal of Hygiene 24, 189240.Google Scholar
Hobson, W. (1948). A dietary and clinical survey of pregnant women with particular reference to toxaemia of pregnancy. Journal of Hygiene 46, 198216.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hobson, W., Jordan, A. & Roseman, C. (1953). Serum-cholesterol levels in elderly people living at home. Lancet ii, 961964.Google Scholar
Hobson, W. & Pemberton, J. (1955). The Health ofthe Elderly at Home. A Medical, Social and Dietary Study of Elderly People Living at Home in Sheffield, pp. 93–1 19. London: Butterworth & Co.Google Scholar
Hobson, W. & Pemberton, J. (1956). The health of the elderly at home. British Medical Journal 1, 587593.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Keys, A. & Keys, M. H. (1954). Serum cholesterol and the diet in clinically healthy men at Slough near London. British Journal of Nutrition 8, 138146.Google Scholar
Khan, N. U. (1941). A study of the diet and social conditions of the working-class families in Newcastle Upon Tyne. Nutrition Abstracts and Reviews 11, 102.Google Scholar
Kimm, S. Y. S., Ornstein, S. M., DeLong, E. R. & Grufferman, S. (1983). Secular trends in ischemic heart disease mortality : regional variation. Circulation 68, 38.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kitchin, A. H., Passmore, R., Pyke, M. & Warnock, G. M. (1949). Studies of the diet of students at Edinburgh University. British Journal of Social Medicine 3, 1028.Google ScholarPubMed
Levy, R. I. (1984). Causes of the decrease in cardiovascular mortality. American Journal of Cardiology 54, 7c–13c.Google Scholar
Lonergan, M. E., Milne, J. S., Maule, M. M. & Williamson, J. (1975). A dietary survey of older people in Edinburgh. British Journal of Nutrition 34, 517527.Google Scholar
Loughridge, J. M., Walker, A. D., Sarsby, H. & Shepherd, R. (1989). Foods eaten outside the home: nutrient contribution to total diet. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 2, 361369.Google Scholar
McCance, R. A., Widdowson, E. M. & Verdon-Roe, C. M. (1938). A study of English diets by the individual method. 111. Pregnant women at different economic levels. Journal of Hygiene 38, 596622.Google Scholar
Macleod, C. C., Judge, T. G. & Caird, F. I. (1974). Nutrition of the elderly at home. I. Intakes of energy, protein, carbohydrates and fat. Age and Aging 3, 158166.Google Scholar
Marr, J. W. & Heady, J. A. (1986). Within and between person variation in dietary surveys: iiuinber of days needed to classify individuals. Human Nutrition :Applied Nutrition 40A, 347364.Google Scholar
Medical Research Council (1924). Report on the Nutrition of Miners and Their Families. MRC Special Report Series no. 87, pp. 2033. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Medical Research Council (1926). Poverty, Nutrition and Growth. Studies ofchild Lqe in Cities and Rural Districts of Scotland. MRC Special Report Series no. 101. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Ministry of Health (1968). A Pilot Survey of the Nutrition of Young Children in 1963. Reports on Public Health and Medical Subjects no. 118, pp. 149. London: H.M. Stationery Office.Google Scholar
Morris, J. N., Marr, J. W. & Clayton, D. G. (1977). Diet and heart: a postscript. British Medical Journal 2, 13071314.Google Scholar
Morris, J. N., Marr, J. W., Heady, J. A., Mills, G. L. & Pilkington, T. R. E. (1963). Diet and plasma cholesterol in 99 bank men. British Medical Journal I, 571576.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
National Advisory Committee on Nutrition Education (1983). A Discussion Paper on Proposals for Nutritional Guidelines for Health Education in Britain. London: Health Education Council.Google Scholar
Neill, D. J. & Phillips, H. I. B. (1972). The masticatory performance and dietary intake of elderly edentulous patients. Dental Practioner 22, 384389.Google ScholarPubMed
Orr, J. B. & Clark, M. L. (1930). A dietary survey of six hundred and seven families in seven cities and towns in Scotland. Lancet ii, 594598.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paton, D. N., Dunlop, J. C. & Inglis, E. (1902). A Study of the Diet of the Labouring Classes in Edinburgh, pp. 1104. Edinburgh: Otto Schulze & Co.Google Scholar
Platt, B. S., Gray, P. G., Parr, E., Baines, A. H. J., Clayton, S., Hobson, E. A., Hollingsworth, D. F., Berry, W. T. C. & Washington, E. (1964). The food purchases of elderly women living alone: a statistical inconsistency and its investigation. British Journal of Nutrition 18, 413429.Google Scholar
Pyke, M., Harrison, R., Holmes, S. & Chamberlain, K. (1947). Nutritional value of diets eaten by old people in London. Lancet 253, 461464.Google Scholar
Roscoe, M. H. & McKay, H. S. (1946). A dietary survey of pregnant women and school children in Edinburgh. Edinburgh Medical Journal 53, 565573.Google ScholarPubMed
Roshanai, F. & Sanders, T. A. B. (1984). Assessment of fatty acid intakes in vegans and omnivores. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 38A, 345354.Google Scholar
Smithells, R. W., Ankers, C., Carver, M. E., Lemon, D., Schorah, C. J. & Sheppard, S. (1977). Maternal nutrition in early pregnancy. British Journal of Nutrition 38, 497506.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stallones, R. A. (1980). The rise and fall of ischematic heart disease. Scientfic American 243, 4349.Google Scholar
Stephen, A. M. & Wald, N. J. (1990). Trends in individual consumption of dietary fat in the United States 192C1984. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 52, 457469.Google Scholar
Stockley, L., Hurren, C. A., Chapman, R. I., Broadhurst, A. J. & Jones, F. A. (1986). Energy, protein and fat intake estimated using a food recording electronic device compared with a weighed diary. Human Nutriiion: Applied Nutrition 40A, 1923.Google Scholar
Thompson, B., Skipper, D., Fraser, C., Hewitt, A. & Hunter, D. (1989). Dietary intake of Aberdeen primigravidae in 1950151 and 1984185. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 2, 345359.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomson, A. M. (1958). Diet in pregnancy. 1. Dietary survey technique and the nutritive value of diets taken by primigravidae. British Journal of Nutrition 12, 446461.Google Scholar
Thomson, A. M. (1959 a). Diet in pregnancy. 2. Assessment of the nutritive value of diets, especially in relation to differences between social classes. British Journal of Nutrition 13, 190204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomson, A. M. (1959 b). Diet in pregnancy. 3. Diet in relation to the course and outcome of pregnancy. British Journal of Nutrition 13, 509525.Google Scholar
Thomson, A. M. & Billewicz, W. Z. (1961). Height, weight and food intake in man. British Journal of Nutrition 15, 241252.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thomson, M., Elton, R. A., Fulton, M., Brown, S., Wood, D. A. & Oliver, M. F. (1988 a). Individual variation in the dietary intake of a group of Scottish men. Journal of Human Nutrition and Dietetics 1, 4757.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thomson, M., Fulton, M., Elton, R. A., Brown, S., Wood, D. A. & Oliver, M. F. (1988 b).Alcohol consumption and nutrient intake in middle-aged Scottish men. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 47, 139145.Google Scholar
Thomson, M., Fulton, M., Wood, D. A., Brown, S., Elton, R. A., Birtwhistle, A. & Oliver, M. F. (1985). A comparison of the nutrient intake of some Scotsmen with dietary recommendations. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 39A, 443455.Google Scholar
Thomson, M., Logan, R. L., Sharman, M., Lockerbie, L., Riemersma, R. A. & Oliver, M. F. (1982). Dietary survey in 40-year-old Edinburgh men. Human Nutrition: Applied Nutrition 36A, 272280.Google ScholarPubMed
Tulty, A. M. T. (1921). A study of the nutrition and economic conditions of working class families in Glasgow in April 1921. Lancet i, 5759.Google Scholar
Tully, A. M. T. (1924). Artisan families in Glasgow. Glasgow Medical Journal, 101, 13.Google Scholar
Tully, A. M. T. & Urie, E. M. (1922). Study of diets and economic conditions of labouring class families in Glasgow in June 1922. Glasgow Medical Journal 98, 353368.Google Scholar
Widdowson, E. M. (1936). A study of English diets by the individual method. I. Men. Journal of Hygiene 36, 269292.Google Scholar
Widdowson, E. M. & Alington, B. K. (1941). Middle-class diets in peace and war. Lancet ii, 361365.Google Scholar
Widdowson, E. M., Edholm, O.G. & McCance, R. A. (1954). The food intake and energy expenditure of cadets in training. British Journal of Nutrition 8, 147155.Google Scholar
Widdowson, E. M. & McCance, R. A. (1936). A study of English diets by the individual method. 11. Women. Journal of Hygiene 36, 293309.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Widdowson, E. M. & McCance, R. A. (1942). The war and school-boys food. Lancet ii, 689692.Google Scholar
Widdowson, E. M. & McCance, R. A. (1945). Individual dietary surveys. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society 3, 110114.Google Scholar
Wise, A., Lockie, G. M. & Liddell, J. A. (1986). Effective ways of reducing saturated fat intake. Health Education Journal 45, 210214.CrossRefGoogle Scholar