I 623.3 Enhancing medical student competence
with USDA nutritional guidelines: novel application of digital
photography monitoring in school meals.
D. Monlezun, A.
Rodman, B. Telsey, B.G. Leong, L. Abu-Shamat, D. Kay, D.
Green, L. Sarris and T. Harlan. Tulane Univ. and Tulane Univ.
Sch. of Med.
D132
II 623.4 Evaluating the relationship between fruit
and vegetable intake using plasma and dermal biomarkers and
reported dietary intake in 4th grade children.
L. Nguyen, R.E.
Scherr, J. Linnell, Y. Nicholson, T. Spezzano, K. Brian, M.
Briggs, I. Ermakov, W. Gellermann, C. Keen, S. Miyamoto,
M. Smith, F. Steinberg, H.M. Young and S. Zidenberg-Cherr.
Univ. of California, Davis, UCCE, Sacramento and Stanislaus
Counties, UC ANR, Sacramento and Modesto, Univ. of Utah
and Betty Irene Moore Sch. of Nursing, Univ. of California
Davis.
D133
I 623.5 The development and implementation of
an inquiry-based nutrition education curriculum for the Shaping
Healthy Choices Program.
J. Linnell, R. Scherr, Y. Nicholson,
T. Spezzano, K. Brian, S. Zidenberg-Cherr and M.H. Smith.
Univ. of California, Davis, UCCE Sacramento and Stanislaus
Counties and UC ANR, Sacramento and Modesto.
D134
II 623.6 The Shaping Healthy Choices Program:
a multi-component, school-based approach to improve
children’s nutrition and health behaviors while supporting
regional agriculture.
R.E. Scherr, J. Linnell, M. Smith, Y.
Nicholson, T. Spezzano, J. Bergman, K. Brian, M. Briggs,
G. Feenstra, C. Hillhouse, C.L. Keen, L. Nguyen, L. Ontai, S.
Schaefer, F. Steinberg, C. Sutter, J. Wright, H. Young and S.
Zidenberg-Cherr. Univ. of California, Davis, UCCE Sacramento
and Stanislaus Counties, UC ANR, Sacramento and Modesto
and Univ. of California Sch. of Nursing, Sacramento.
D135
I 623.7 Satter Feeding Dynamics Inventory:
response mapping identified a valid tool to assess parent
adherence to the division of responsibility in feeding young
children.
B. Lohse, K. Arnold and E. Satter. Penn State and
Ellyn Satter Assocs., Madison, WI.
D136
II 623.8 The proof is in the pudding: creation
of an evidence-based medical school nutritional education
curriculum with cooking demonstrations.
E. Joo, D. Monlezun,
A. Birkhead, B. Leong, L. Abu-Shamat, D. Kay, L. Sarris and
T. Harlan. Tulane Univ.
624. ALIGNING NUTRITION EDUCATION PROGRAMS
AND RESEARCH TO PROMOTE CHANGE
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
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D137
I 624.1 Why do WIC mothers choose not to
follow current infant feeding recommendations?
C. Neshteruk,
J. Savage and L. Birch. Penn State.
D138
II 624.2 Make physical activity (PA) a STAPLE in
children’s lives: development of a mnemonic to assist parents
of preschoolers in planning PA opportunities for their children.
D. Golem, J. Martin-Biggers and C. Byrd-Bredbenner. Col.
of Hlth., Human Svcs. and Sci., Ashford Univ., CA and Rutgers,
The State Univ. of New Jersey.
NUTRITION SUNDAY
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D139
I 624.3 Assessment of nutrition and physical
activity in children participating in the Shaping Healthy Choices
Program.
R.E. Scherr, J. Linnell, Y. Nicholson, T. Spezzano,
J. Bergman, K. Brian, M. Briggs, S.E. Cherr, I. Ermakov, G.
Feenstra, W. Gellermann, C. Hillhouse, L. Nguyen, L. Ontai,
S. Schaefer, M. Smith, C. Sutter, J. Wright and S. Zidenberg-
Cherr. Univ. of California Davis , UCCE, Sacramento and
Stanislaus Counties, UC ANR, Sacramento and Modesto,
Sonoma State Univ. and Univ. of Utah.
D140
II 624.4 Exploring nutrition education
opportunities in alternative school settings.
J.A. Phelps, M.
Norquest, J. Hermann and T. Kennedy. Univ. of Arkansas for
Med. Sci. and Oklahoma State Univ.
D141
I 624.5 Comparing children’s fruit and vegetable
preferences using a pictorial tool versus a tasting assessment.
H.B. Spangler, V. Carraway-Stage, M. Borges and L.S.
Goodell. North Carolina State Univ.
D142
II 624.6 NEEDs for Bones is a tested, effective
osteoporosis education intervention for middle school youth.
B.
Lohse and M. Mazich. Penn State.
D143
I 624.7 Profiles from assessment of amount,
source, and cost of egg consumption by low-income women
inform nutrition education intervention planning.
C-H. Wei and
B. Lohse. Penn State.
D144
II 624.8 Nutrition without boundaries – one
medical student group’s experiences in Boston.
C. Schoettler,
K. Peace, S. Feldman, J. Newcomb, A. Sax, C. Smith-Lin, R.
Lindsay, K. Ireland and C. Lenders. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
625. NUTRITION EDUCATION IN DIVERSE
POPULATIONS
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
s
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Presentation time: 12:45
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D145
I 625.1 Nutrition messages in mainstream
and ethnic minority women’s magazines over three decades:
a content analysis.
R. Landman, M-C. Yeh, M. Keeney, M.M.
Leung and K. Navder. CUNY Sch. of Publ. Hlth. at Hunter Col.
D146
II 625.2 A study on the effect of breakfast
skipping on dietary behavior among middle school students in
Incheon, Korea.
H-J. Chung and Y-S. Shim. Inha Univ., South
Korea.
D147
I 625.3 Research on nutritional knowledge,
preference and intake of Korean traditional foods and fast foods
by middle school students in Incheon, Korea.
H-J. Chung and
I-S. Yang. Inha Univ., South Korea.
D148
II 625.4 A study on the diet behaviors of middle
school girls in Incheon Korea, according to variables of home
environment.
H-J. Chung and J-M. Lee. Inha Univ., South
Korea.
D149
I 625.5 Changes in the food expenditure of
Korean household.
H-J. Chung and M.Y. Lee. Inha Univ.,
South Korea.
D150
II 625.6 Consumers’ perception and response to
CSR activities of food companies.
H-J. Chung and M.Y. Lee.
Inha Univ., South Korea.
D151
I 625.7 BMI distribution and body image of
Korean high school students in Gyeonggi Province.
K.J. Chang
and S-y. Lee. Inha Univ., South Korea.
D152
II 625.8 Mutivariate analysis of factors affecting
skipping breakfast in Korean middle school students.
K.J.
Chang and M.J. Jang. Inha Univ. Grad. Sch. of Educ., South
Korea.
D153
I 625.9 Cultures with unique nutrition concerns:
lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender.
H.T. Bilyk, C. Wellington
and C. Kapica. Rosalind Franklin Univ. of Med. and Sci.,
Windsor Family Hlth. Team, Ontario and Awegrin Inst., Arlington
Heights, IL.
D154
II 625.10 Breastfeeding knowledge, attitudes,
and intent in a sample of Chinese undergraduate students.
Z.
Lou, G. Zeng, L. Huang, F. Liu, X. Pang and K. Kavanagh.
Univ. of Tennessee, Knoxville and SiChuan Univ., China.
D155
I 625.11 Nutrition education integrates culture via
storytelling in cooking workshops for community nutritionists.
D.M. Winham, S. Szkupinski Quiroga, T. Underiner, S.
Woodson and M. Todd. Howell Res. Assocs. LLC, Queen
Creek, AZ and Arizona State Univ., Phoenix and Tempe.
D156
II 625.12 Facebook successfully recruited
low-income participants to nutrition program evaluation.
P.
Wamboldt and B. Lohse. Penn State.
D157
I 625.13 The role of the temporal environment
in shaping Dominican women’s food routines in New York City
and the Santo Domingo, D.R.
P. Weisberg and C. Devine.
Cornell Univ.
D158
II 625.14 Regional food prices and dietary
practices among participants of the USDA EFNEP program.
B. Luick, J. Greenberg and A. Bersamin. Univ. of Alaska
Fairbanks.
626. BEHAVIORAL SCIENCE AND EATING
BEHAVIOR CHANGE
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
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D159
I 626.1 Non-responsive feeding behaviors
are stable across toddlerhood.
K.M. Hurley, N. Tilton, M.
Candelaria, E. Hager, L. Latta, Y. Wang, L. Caulfield and
M.M. Black. Univ. of Maryland Sch. of Med. and Johns Hopkins
Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
D160
II 626.2 Text messaging enhances nutrition
knowledge and behavior among college students: Mobile
MyPlate.
L.E. O’Connor, O. Brown and D. Savaiano. Purdue
Univ. and Auburn Univ.
D161
I 626.3 Testing the internal validity of a
questionnaire measuring dietary satisfaction through factor
analysis.
B.E. Wheeler, P.Y. Hsiao, C.M. Durward, B.J. Rolls
and S.M. Nickols-Richardson. Penn State.
D162
II 626.4 Analysis of allostatic load and eating
behaviors among healthy young women with different body
types.
M. Horiguchi, R. Maruyama and G. Tanaka. Sch. of
Hlth. Sci., Sapporo Med. Univ., Grad. Sch. of Med., Tohoku
Univ. and Ctr. for Med. Educ., Sapporo Med. Univ., Japan.
D163
I 626.5 Friends matter: food safety cognitive
and behavioral influences among youth.
V. Quick, R. Heller, K.
Corda, J. Martin-Biggers and C. Byrd-Bredbenner. Eunice
Kennedy Shriver NICHD, NIH, Rutgers, The State Univ. of New
Jersey and Univ. of Texas at San Antonio.
SUNDAY NUTRITION
176
D164
II 626.6 Repeated measures of eating
competence over a 12-month nutrition education program
revealed rebound following early decline: implications for
interventions planned to enhance eating competence.
T.
Psota, B. Lohse and P.M. Kris-Etherton. Natl. Ctr. for Weight
and Wellness, Washington, DC and Penn State.
D165
I 626.7 Indiana students in the 2010-11 USDA
Fresh Fruit and Vegetable Program increased variety of fruits
and vegetables consumed and requests to parents to purchase
fruits and vegetables through mediating changes in intention
and attitude.
Y-C. Lin, E. Foland, Y. Bai and A.D. Fly. Indiana
Univ., Indiana Dept. of Educ., Indianapolis and Montclair State
Univ., NJ.
D166
II 626.8 Self-regulation and diet as predictors of
life satisfaction.
K.M. Frye, J.S. Morrell, G.B. Carey and R.
Warner. Univ. of New Hampshire.
D167
I 626.9 Instrument testing of behavior change
questionnaires for the PAWS Club: peer-education about
weight steadiness study.
S.A. Nelson, M.A. Corbin and S.M.
Nickols-Richardson. Penn State.
627. NUTRITION EDUCATION DURING PRENATAL
AND PERINATAL STAGES OF LIFE
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
s
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D168
I 627.1 Pregnant women use an online healthy
weight gain program as designed.
C.M. Olson, M.L. Graham,
M.M. Demment, D. Fernandez, J. Reschke and S. Groth.
Cornell Univ., Univ. of Rochester Sch. of Med. and Dent. and
Univ. of Rochester Sch. of Nursing.
D169
II 627.2 Improving periconceptional health
among WIC participants through the prevention of excessive
gestational weight gain: from research to intervention.
M.
Koleilat, L. Pham Kim and S.E. Whaley. PHFE-WIC, Irwindale,
CA and Pepperdine Univ.
628. LACTATION: BIOLOGY OF MILK PRODUCTION
AND SECRETION
Poster
(Sponsored by: Lactation RIS)
s
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Presentation time: 12:45
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D170
I 628.1 Time-resolved quantitative analysis of
human milk proteome reveals developing milk and mammary-
gland functions during the first year of lactation.
Q. Zhang, J.K.
Cundiff, S.D. Maria, R.J. McMahon, J.G. Woo, B.S. Davidson
and A.L. Morrow. Mead Johnson Pediat. Nutr. Inst., Evansville,
IN and Cincinnati Children’s Hosp. Med. Ctr.
D171
II 628.2 Maternal genetic risk factors for infant
zinc deficiency.
J. Friel, S. Castilo San Juan, W. Qasem, A.
Serrano Leon, N. Yurkova and P. Eck. Univ. of Manitoba.
D172
I 628.3 Human mammary epithelial cell gene
expression and product secretion of milk lipids during secretory
activation.
M.A. Mohammad and M.W. Haymond. USDA,
Baylor Col. of Med.
629. LACTATION: BIOACTIVE COMPOUNDS AND
OTHER MILK CONSTITUENTS
Poster
(Sponsored by: Lactation RIS)
s
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D173
I 629.1 Naturally occurring peptides in human
milk: identification and evidence for antibacterial action.
D.C.
Dallas, A. Guerrero, N. Khaldi, D. Barile, J.B. German and C.
Lebrilla. Univ. of California, Davis and University Col. Dublin.
D174
II 629.2 Human milk components inhibit H1N1
influenza virus infection in vitro.
B. Liu, Z. Yu and D.S. Newburg.
Boston Col.
D175
I 629.3 Bacterial flora in human milk in health
and disease.
L. Kvist and C. Schalén. Lund Univ., Sweden.
D176
II 629.4 Effects of prolonged freezing on the
integrity of human milk.
A. Faraghi Ahrabi, D. Handa, C.N.
Codipilly, S. Shah, D. Potak and R.J. Schanler. Cohen
Children’s Med. Ctr. of New York, New Hyde Park and Feinstein
Inst. for Med. Res., Manhasset, NY.
D177
I 629.5 Competitive enzyme immunoassay for
vitamin B12 in human milk: validation and evaluation of effects
of maternal supplementation on milk B12.
D. Hampel, S.
Shahab-Ferdows, J.M. Domek, T. Siddiqua and L.H. Allen.
USDA and Univ. of California, Davis.
D178
II 629.6 Human milk oligosaccharides modulate
the duration of rotavirus-induced diarrhea, colonic microbiota
and intraluminal environment in piglets.
M. Li, M. Wang,
M.H. Monaco, G.C. Fahey, Jr., T.B. Kuhlenschmidt, M.S.
Kuhlenschmidt and S.M. Donovan. Univ. of Illinois, Urbana.
D179
I 629.7 Multiplexing of human preterm and term
milk cytokines.
M.E. Groer, S.N. Williams and B.P. Kane. Univ.
of South Florida Col. of Nursing.
D180
II 629.8 The cellular hierarchy and composition
of human breast milk.
F. Hassiotou and P.E. Hartmann. Univ.
of Western Australia.
D181
I 629.9 Breast milk and the lactating breast as
a tool to elucidate breast cancer.
F. Hassiotou, P.E. Hartmann
and P. Blancafort. Univ. of Western Australia.
D182
II 629.10 Inflammatory cytokines in human
milk are inter-correlated and may be related to infant growth
characteristics and maternal weight status.
B.E. Young, A.L.
Morrow, B.S. Davidson, S.R. Geraghty and N.F. Krebs. Univ.
of Colorado Denver, Aurora and Cincinnati Childern’s Med. Ctr.
D183
I 629.11 3’ Sialyllactose inhibits adhesion of
diarrheagenic bacteria to epithelial monolayers in vitro.
L. Yang
and H. Emerich. Pfizer Nutr., Collegeville, PA.
D184
II 629.12 Plasma fatty acids, human milk
fortification and lipid oxidation in premature infants.
J. Friel,
J. Kim, Z. Hossain, D. McKay and W. Diehl-Jones. Univ. of
Manitoba.
D185
I 629.13 Active transcription factors in the
development of the small intestine during early life.
M. Zhang,
Y. Liao and B. Lönnerdal. Univ. of California, Davis and
Australian Natl. Univ.
NUTRITION SUNDAY
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D186
II 629.14 Bioactive factors in the milk of a non-
human primate biomedical model.
K. Hinde, H. Drought, M.
Wechsler and R. Bernstein. Harvard Univ., California Natl.
Primate Res. Ctr., Davis and George Washington Univ.
D187
I 629.15 Postpartum changes in the
endocannabinoid metabolome of human breast milk.
J.T.
Wood, H.A. Durham, S.K. Vadivel, A. Makriyannis and C.J.
Lammi-Keefe. Northeastern Univ. and Pennington Biomed.
Res. Ctr., LSU.
D188
II 629.16 Short-chain milk oligosaccharide levels
in human milk and infant plasma.
G.G. Radzanowski, P.N.
Garrett, X. Li, A.M. Burgher, N. Contractor and K. Pramuk.
Pfizer Nutr., Collegeville, PA.
D189
I 629.17 Fortification of donor human milk for
premature infants.
E. Bissett, A. Fogleman, R. Cohen, P.
Sakamoto and J. Allen. North Carolina State Univ., Stanford
Univ. Sch. of Med. and Human Milk Banking Assn. of North
America, San Jose.
D190
II 629.18 Comparison of the sialic acid
components of mature human milk in three countries.
A.M.
Burgher, X. Li, J.A. Ramirez-Mayans, E.M. Ontijo-Barrios,
B. Sablan, Y. Wali, L. Van Alstine and K. Pramuk. Pfizer Nutr.,
Collegeville, PA, Natl. Pediat. Inst., Mexico City, Philippine Gen.
Hosp., Manila City, Sultan Qaboos Univ., Oman and Pfizer,
Groton, CT.
D191
I 629.19 Storage of leftover unpasteurized and
pasteurized human milk.
T. Meng, A. Fogleman, R. Cohen, P.
Sakamoto and J. Allen. North Carolina State Univ., Stanford
Univ. Sch. of Med. and Human Milk Banking Assn. of North
America, San Jose.
D192
II 629.20 Method validation for the measurement
of sialic acid and sialyllactose in human milk using high
performance anion exchange chromatography with pulsed
amperometric detection.
X. Li, S. Yachetti and A.M. Burgher.
Pfizer Nutr., Collegeville, PA.
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