4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Approaches to setting dietary reference values for micronutrients, and translation into recommendations

Journal

PROCEEDINGS OF THE NUTRITION SOCIETY
Volume 80, Issue 3, Pages 365-372

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0029665121000562

Keywords

Dietary reference values; Dietary requirements; Micronutrients

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Dietary reference values are estimates of daily nutrient or food energy intake for healthy people, used for various purposes including assessing adequacy and safety, food labeling, and food fortification strategies. The setting of DRV in the UK is the responsibility of the Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition, based on evidence related to food and nutrients' impact on health. Calls have been made for more harmonization and transparency in global nutrient requirement setting practices.
Dietary reference values (DRV) are estimates of the daily amounts of nutrients or food energy that meet the needs of healthy people. In the UK, three terms are used to express these estimates, assuming a normal distribution of requirements in a population. These are the estimated average requirement, the lower reference nutrient intake and the reference nutrient intake. DRV are for use in a variety of settings, including the assessment of adequacy and safety of nutrient or energy intake in a population group, in the design of meal provision in care settings, in food labelling and in considering food fortification strategies. DRV, and other expressions of nutrient requirements, assume a relationship between the intake of a nutrient and some criterion of adequacy, the outcome. Estimates of requirements are based on a diverse range of measures of adequacy, according to available evidence. The Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition (SACN) is the body responsible for reviewing and setting DRV for the UK population. The work of SACN is guided by a framework of evidence that relates food and nutrients to health. There have been calls for the harmonisation of approaches used in the setting of nutrient requirements, globally, and an increased transparency in the decision-making process. Some progress has been made in this regard, but there is a great deal of work to be done.

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