DQI Diet Quality Index - International
DQI Diet Quality Index - International
DQI Diet Quality Index - International
Overview
Diet quality is an important measure in understanding food security because of the synergistic nature of micro- and
macronutrients (Gerber, 2001 [1]) and the association of healthy diet patterns with reduced risk for diet-related disease
and illness (Kant, 1996 [2]). The Diet Quality Index – International (DQI-I) is illustrative of a class of diet quality indices,
which include other indicators such as the Healthy Eating Index [3] (HEI). We have chosen to highlight the DQI-I here
because it is one of the few indicators that has been tested for a range of cultural contexts and validated for use in a
range of countries with different dietary patterns.
The DQI-I is a composite, individual-level diet quality indicator. It was created in 2003 to enable cross-cultural diet
quality comparisons, something that had previously not been done using diet quality composite indicators (Kim et al.,
2003 [4]). The DQI-I is built off existing indicators, such as the HEI and the Diet Quality Index (DQI), but was
formulated to incorporate the many aspects of a diet which contribute to quality, including diversity, adequacy,
moderation, and balance.
Method of Construction
This indicator is created using scores from four components of diet quality, each calculated separately. The table
below outlines basic information on how the components are defined, and the criteria for scoring each.
Variety - protein 6 sources: meat, poultry, fish, 3 or more sources consumed: 5 pts 0-5
sources dairy, beans, eggs
2 sources consumed: 3 pts
Moderation 6 groups: total fat, saturated fat, Between 0 and 6 points awarded 0-
cholesterol, sodium, empty for each of the 5 moderation 30
calorie foods groups, depending on percentage
of RDA met
Once a score has been calculated for each of the components, the DQI-I is calculated by summing each of the four
scores together, producing a number between 0 and 100. For a more detailed explanation on the process and the
specific scoring criteria, please refer to the “Construction of the DQI-I” section of the paper published in The Journal of
Nutrition (Kim et al., 2003 [5]).
Uses
DQI-I is used to assess the diet quality of individuals, and can be used in a variety of cross- cultural settings, making it
useful in comparing diets across regions (Kim et al., 2003 [4]). Additionally, this indicator includes specific nutrients
associated with chronic, diet-related illnesses and includes particular food groupings, such as empty calorie foods,
that make it an especially useful tool in assessing changing diet quality associated with the nutrition transition (Kim et
al., 2003 [4]). As an individual-level indicator, it can be paired with individual health outcomes or demographic
information, such as religion, age, sex, education, or any other characteristics of interest (Yun et al., 2009 [6]).
Data Source
Individual-level dietary data can obtained from a Food Frequency Questionnaire [10] (FFQ), 24-hour Dietary Recall [11],
or Weighed Food Records [12]. National or regional Food Composition Tables should be used to identify the nutrient
contents of the foods and can be found at Food and Agriculture’s (FAO) International Network of Food Data Systems (
INFOODS [13]) or the International Life Science Institute’s (ILSI) World Nutrient Databases for Dietary Studies (
WNDDS [14]).
Finally, to calculate the adequacy, moderation, and balance scores, Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDAs) or
Reference Nutrient Intake (RNIs), can be obtained from the Institute of Medicine for the United States (IOM, 2006 [15]),
from the British Nutrition Foundation for the United Kingdom (British Nutrition Foundation, 2016 [16]), or the European
Food Safety Authority of the European Union (EFSA, 2017 [17]). As an alternative to country specific RDAs/RNIs, the
FAO/WHO RNIs can be used (FAO/WHO, 2001 [18]).
Links to guidelines
Kim et al., (2003). "The Diet Quality Index-International (DQI-I) provides an effective tool for cross-national
comparison of diet quality as illustrated by China and the United States." [5]
Please cite as: INDDEX Project (2018), Data4Diets: Building Blocks for Diet-related Food Security Analysis. Tufts
University, Boston, MA. https://inddex.nutrition.tufts.edu/data4diets. Accessed on 16 May 2021.