B.L. Rogers, J. Coates, S. Passarelli, E. Bontrager, D. Suri,
S. Ghosh, Y. Kidane and K. Sadler. Friedman Nutr. Sch., Tufts
Univ.
D73
II 619.6 Higher body mass index, lean body
mass and fat mass obtained by bioimpedance are associated
with slower HIV disease progression in asymptomatic HIV
+
adults.
S. Luisi, A. Campa, S.S. Martinez, J. Makhema, H.
Bussmann, M. Farahani, R. Marlink and M.K. Baum. R.
Stempel Col. of Publ. Hlth. and Soc. Work, Florida Intl. Univ.,
Botswana Harvard AIDS Inst., Gaborone and Harvard Sch. of
Publ. Hlth.
D74
I 619.7 Consumption rate of a whole-food
macronutient supplement for adults initiating antiretroviral
therapy in Kenya.
J.D. Nudel, M. Ndirangu, M. Sheriff, S.
Arpadi, M. Hawken, R.J. Deckelbaum, W. El Sadr and K.A.
Sztam. Harvard Med. Sch., Georgia State Univ., Mailman
Sch. of Publ. Hlth., NY, Columbia Univ. Med. Ctr. and Boston
Children’s Hosp.
D75
II 619.8 Prevalence of vitamin A deficiency
and associations with socioeconomic status in lactating HIV-
infected Malawian mothers.
K.D. Patel, M.E. Bentley, V.L. Flax,
S. Shahab-Ferdows, L.H. Allen, C.S. Chasela, D. Kayira, G.
Tegha, D.J. Jamieson, C.M. van der Horst and L.S. Adair.
Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USDA, Davis, UNC Proj.,
Lilongwe, Malawi and Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
D76
I 619.9 Effect of multiple micronutrient
supplementation on the neurodevelopment of HIV-exposed
Tanzanian infants.
C. McDonald, K. Manji, R. Kupka, J.
Okuma, R. Bosch, R. Kisenge, S. Aboud, D. Bellinger, W.
Fawzi and C. Duggan. Boston Children’s Hosp., Muhimbili
Univ. of Hlth. and Allied Sci., Tanzania, UNICEF, Dakar, Senegal
and Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
SUNDAY NUTRITION
172
620. GLOBAL NUTRITION: PROGRAMS AND POLICY
Poster
(Sponsored by: Global Nutrition Council (GNC))
s
un
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:45
pm
-1:45
pm
(I); 1:45
pm
-2:45
pm
(II)
D77
I 620.1 ProPAN 2.0 (Process for the Promotion
of Child Feeding): a tool for infant and young child feeding
programming.
C. Luttter, R. Mir, H. Pachon, E. Cheung, K.
Sullivan, H. Creed-Kanashiro, A. Panjwani, J. Escobar and
K. Alam. Pan Amer. Hlth. Org., Washington, DC, Ctrs. for Dis.
Control and Prevent., Emory Univ., UNICEF, Inst. of Nutr. Res.,
Lima, Peru, Univ. of South Carolina and Recruiting Minds,
Monmouth Junction, NJ.
D78
II 620.2 Sustainability of food-security policies
during presidential transitions: framework integrating socio-
political and nutritional sciences.
J.L. Escobar-Alegría and
E.A. Frongillo. Univ. of South Carolina.
D79
I 620.3 Rate of participation in bi-monthly,
community-based screening for acute malnutrition in rural
Mali, and factors associated with screening participation.
R.
Ackatia-Armah, C.M. McDonald, S. Doumbia, J.M. Peerson
and K.H. Brown. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med., Helen Keller Intl.,
Bamako, Mali, Boston Children’s Hosp., Univ. of Bamako, Mali
and Univ. of Califormia, Davis.
D80
II 620.4 Low retinol levels virtually undetected
in coastal Guatemala: findings from a convenience sample of
women and schoolchildren.
M.J. Soto-Méndez, R. Campos,
A.C. Martínez, M. Detlefsen and N.W. Solomons. CeSSIAM,
INCAP and Cabcorp, Guatemala City.
D81
I 620.5 Infant and young child feeding practices
in rural India: a community-based formative research.
F. Anwar,
R. Srivastava and S.P. Singh. Banaras Hindu Univ. , India.
D82
II 620.6 Global anaemia trends in children and
women of reproductive age.
L.M. De-Regil, G.A. Stevens,
M.M. Finucane, C.J. Paciorek, S.R. Flaxman, F. Branca,
J.P. Pena-Rosas, Z.A. Bhutta and M. Ezzati. WHO, Geneva,
UCSF, Univ. of California, Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon Univ., Aga
Khan Univ., Pakistan and Imperial Col. London.
D83
I 620.7 Antenatal care quality and its effect on
nutrition interventions.
E.L. Phillips, D. Pelletier, R. Stoltzfus,
L. Michaud and L. Gracia. Cornell Univ. and World Vision
Haiti, Port-au-Prince.
D84
II 620.8 Household food security and
dietary diversity in the context of an agricultural and market
development program in Guatemala.
J.R. Lopez Cintron, N.J.
Engeseth, F.M. Dong, J.C. Greene, A. Wuth, R. Peterson, P.
Torres, J.E. Andrade and W.G. Helferich. Univ. of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign and Univ. of Indianapolis.
D85
I 620.9 Effect of timed and targeted counseling
by peer mothers in changing infant and young child feeding
practices among mothers of children 0 to 18 months in four
districts in Southern Ethiopia.
M. Beyero, K. Reider and Y.
Mekonnen. World Vision Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, World Vision
U.S., Washington DC and Mela Res. PLC, Addis Ababa.
D86
II 620.10 Formative study on the acceptance of
Wheat Soy Blend Plus Plus as a daily complementary food
supplement in rural Bangladesh.
R. Kramer, A.A. Shamim,
M.A. Kumkum, M. Hanif, S. Shaikh, R.D. Merrill and P.
Christian. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and
JiVitA Proj., Gaibandha, Bangladesh.
D87
I 620.11 A mixed-methods process evaluation
using program impact pathway highlights the role of demand
creation in implementing a market-based micronutrient powder
intervention in rural Bangladesh.
P. Menon, R. Rawat, K.K.
Saha, T. Roopnaraine, A. Khaled, M.I. Bhuiyan, M.A. Islam,
M.A. Khan, S. Siraj and M.T. Ruel. Intl. Food Policy Res.
Inst., Washington, DC, Lusaka, Zambia and BRAC, Dhaka,
Bangladesh.
D88
II 620.12 Targeted technical assistance improves
the quality of provincial nutrition plans in Vietnam between
2010 and 2012.
P.H. Nguyen, L.N. Hoang, E.A. Frongillo,
N. Hajeebhoy and P. Menon. Intl. Food Policy Res. Inst.,
Washington, DC, Univ. of South Carolina and FHI360, Hanoi.
D89
I 620.13 Potential impact of the national
food fortification program on adequacy of vitamin A intake
among women in Cameroon: simulations using nationally-
representative 24-hour recall data.
R. Engle-Stone, M.
Nankap, A.O. Ndjebayi and K.H. Brown. Univ. of California,
Davis and Helen Keller Intl., Yaoundé, Cameroon and Dakar,
Senegal.
621. DIETARY ASSESSMENT TOOLS AND
APPLICATIONS
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS)
s
un
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:45
pm
-1:45
pm
(I); 1:45
pm
-2:45
pm
(II)
D90
I 621.1 The development of a valid measure of
school children’s fruit and vegetable consumption.
J.C. Taylor,
B.A. Yon and R.K. Johnson. Univ. of Vermont.
D91
II 621.2 The development of a reliable and
feasible measure of school children’s fruit and vegetable
consumption.
J.C. Taylor, B.A. Yon and R.K. Johnson. Univ.
of Vermont.
D92
I 621.3 Sex differences in diet quality and health
measures in U.S. soldiers entering initial military training.
L.J.
Lutz, E. Gaffney-Stomberg, J.L. Scisco, S.M. Pasiakos, S.
McGraw, S.J. Cable, A.J. Young and J.P. McClung. U.S. Army
Res. Inst. of Envrn. Med., Natick, MA and Init. Mil. Trng. Ctr. of
Excellence, Fort Eustis, VA.
D93
II 621.4 Misreporting of BMI is associated with
misreporting of dietary intake among U.S. adults.
J.M. Poti,
M.A. Mendez and B.M. Popkin. Univ. of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill.
D94
I 621.5 The effects of recall sequence/mode
and day of week on the estimation of usual intake from 24-hour
recall data: an analysis of the 2003-2004 National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey.
S.I. Kirkpatrick, P.M. Guenther
and K.W. Dodd. NCI, NIH and USDA, Alexandria, VA.
D95
II 621.6 Examining dietary energy density and
eating occasions with the remote food photography method.
C. Becker, D.C. Miketinas, C.K. Martin, B. Zawodniak, H.A.
Durham and G. Tuuri. Sch. of Human Ecol., LSU, Pennington
Biomed. Res. Ctr. and LSU AgCtr.
D96
I 621.7 Potassium intake of the U.S. population,
What We Eat in America, NHANES 2009-2010.
M.K. Hoy and
J.D. Goldman. USDA, Beltsville.
NUTRITION SUNDAY
173
S
U
N
D97
II 621.8 How well are college freshmen meeting
recommendations for fruits, vegetables, whole grains, physical
activity, and sleep?
S.S. Wong, E. Driver, A. Kasianchuk, M.A.
Nguyen, H. Darnell, B. Zhang, M. Cluskey and J. Dorbolo.
Oregon State Univ.
622. EPIDEMIOLOGICAL RESEARCH ADDRESSING
DIET AND HEALTH OUTCOMES I
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutritional Epidemiology RIS)
s
un
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:45
pm
-1:45
pm
(I); 1:45
pm
-2:45
pm
(II)
D98
I 622.1 Nutritional factors and C-peptide
preservation in type 1 diabetes.
E.J. Mayer-Davis, D. Dabelea,
J.L. Crandell, T. Crume, R.B. D’Agostino, Jr., L. Dolan, I.B.
King, J.M. Lawrence, J.M. Norris, C. Pihoker and N. The.
Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Univ. of Colorado,
Aurora, Wake Forest Univ. Sch. of Med., Cincinnati Children’s
Hosp. and Med. Ctr., Univ. of New Mexico, Kaiser Permanente,
Southern California, Univ. of Colorado Denver, Children’s Hosp.
and Med.
D99
II 622.2 Longitudinal associations of blood
biomarkers of insulin and glucose metabolism and colorectal
cancer risk in the Framingham Heart Study Offspring population
(1971-2008).
N. Parekh, Y. Lin, M. Vadiveloo, R. Hayes and G.
Lu-Yao. NYU, UMDNJ, Piscataway, NYU Med. Ctr. and Cancer
Inst. of New Jersey, New Brunswick.
D100
I 622.3 Dietary potassium and sodium impact
blood pressure in adolescence.
J.R.’G. Buendia, S.R. Hasnain,
M.L. Bradlee and L.L. Moore. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
D101
II 622.4 Health-related knowledge and attitudes
are associated with sugar-sweetened beverages intake among
U.S. adults.
S. Park, S. Onufrak, B. Sherry and H.M. Blanck.
Ctrs. for Dis. Control and Prevent.
D102
I 622.5 Dairy consumption is inversely
associated with the risk of metabolic syndrome in Korean
adults.
J. Kim. Daegu Univ., South Korea.
D103
II 622.6 Associations of magnesium intake with
coronary artery calcification in the Framingham Heart Study.
A.
Hruby, C.J. O’Donnell, P.F. Jacques, J.B. Meigs, R.J. Wood
and N.M. McKeown. USDA at Tufts Univ., Massachusetts Gen.
Hosp., Harvard Med. Sch., NHLBI Framingham Heart Study
and Univ. of Massachusetts Amherst.
D104
I 622.7 A systematic review of the effects
of sodium reduction on glucose levels.
S. Patel, P. Cobb, S.
Saydah, X. Zhang, J. De Jesus and M. Cogswell. Ctrs. for
Dis. Control and Prevent., Oak Ridge Inst. for Sci. and Educ.
and NHLBI, NIH.
D105
II 622.8 Prevalence of metabolic syndrome and
hyperglycemia in U.S. adults: NHANES 2003-06 and 2007-10.
D.L. Gee and R.L. Bailey. Central Washington Univ. and ODS,
NIH.
D106
I 622.9 Sweet-baked products, but not whole
or refined grains, are negatively associated with bone mineral
density: the Framingham Offspring Cohort.
K.M. Mangano, S.
Sahni, V. Casey and M.T. Hannan. Hebrew SeniorLife, Boston.
D107
II 622.10 Development of dietary methyl score
using plasma homocysteine level in the large two U.S. cohort
study.
S. Jung, Y. Je, E. Giovannucci, W.C. Willet, B. Rosner,
S. Ogino and E. Cho. Channing Div. of Network Med., Boston,
Kyunghee Univ., South Korea, Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and
Dana-Farber Cancer Inst.
D108
I 622.11 Dietary patterns associated with
hypertension among the low income urban population in
Pakistan.
N.F. Safdar, E. Bertone-Johnson, L. Cordeiro, T.
Jafar and N. Cohen. Sch. of Publ. Hlth. and Hlth. Sci., Univ. of
Massachusetts Amherst and Aga Khan Univ., Pakistan.
D109
II 622.12 Associations of intake of fruits and
vegetables with hypertriglyceridemia in Korean adults: Korean
National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys 2007-2009.
C. Yuan, H-J. Lee, H-S.H. Lee, W.C. Willett, M.J. Stampfer,
C-i. Kim and E. Cho. Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Korea Hlth.
Indust. Develop. Inst., Osong and Brigham and Women’s Hosp.
D110
I 622.13 Dietary patterns are associated with
obesity in young women.
J.A. Lindgren, T.J. Hartman, D.C.
Mitchell, D.L. Coffman, L. Van Horn and J.F. Dorgan. Penn
State, Northwestern Univ., Chicago and Fox Chase Cancer Ctr.
D111
II 622.14 Differing effects of statistical approaches
to assess the relationship between egg consumption patterns
and adiposity using data from 2001-2008 NHANES.
T.A.
Nicklas, C.E. O’Neil and V.L. Fulgoni III. Baylor Col. of Med.,
LSU AgCtr. and Nutr. Impact LLC, Battle Creek.
D112 I
622.15 Predicted plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin
D and risk of renal cell cancer.
H-K. Joh, E.L. Giovannucci,
K.A. Bertrand, S. Lim and E. Cho. Seoul Natl. Univ., Brigham
and Women’s Hosp. Channing Div. and Seoul Natl. Univ. Col. of
Med.
D113
II 622.16 Diet, physical activity and use of
complementary products among cancer survivors.
M. Park,
J.E. Lee and D-H. Kim. Sookmyung Women’s Univ. and Hallym
Univ. Col. of Med., South Korea.
D114
I 622.17 Dietary sugars and body weight:
systematic review and meta-analyses of randomized controlled
trials.
L.A. Te Morenga, J. Mann and S. Mallard. Univ. of
Otago, New Zealand.
D115
II 622.18 Factors associated with low water
intake among Korean adolescents—Korea National Health and
Nutrition Examination Survey, 2007-2010.
M-H. Kim, S. Park
and H-S. Lee. Kangwon Natl. Univ., South Korea, Ctrs. for Dis.
Control and Prevent. and Korea Hlth. Indust. Develop. Inst.,
Osong.
D116
I 622.19 Implausible energy intake reporting
in overweight women throughout a weight loss trial.
S.
Rodriguez-Ramirez, M.A. Mendez, S. Hernandez-Cordero,
T. González de Cossío and B.M. Popkin. Natl. Inst. of Publ.
Hlth., Cuernavaca and Univ. of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
D117
II 622.20 The effect of high added sugar intake
on micronutrient intakes during pregnancy.
L. Forbes, S.
Babwick, G. Zeng, J. Graham, A. Gilbert, R. Bell and APrON
Team. Univ. of Guelph, Canada and Univ. of Alberta.
D118
I 622.21 Magnesium intake is associated
with greater bone mineral density but not protective against
fractures in the Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study.
T.S. Orchard, J. Larson, J. Cauley, Z. Chen, A. LaCroix, J.
Wactawski-Wende and R.D. Jackson. The Ohio State Univ.,
Fred Hutchinson Cancer Res. Ctr., Univ. of Pittsburgh, Univ. of
Arizona and Univ. of Buffalo SUNY.
SUNDAY NUTRITION
174
D119
II 622.22 Milk intake is associated with lower
risk of hip fracture in older men and women: the Framingham
Original Cohort.
S. Sahni, K.L. Tucker, D.P. Kiel, L. Quach,
V. Casey and M.T. Hannan. IFAR, Hebrew SeniorLife and
Harvard Med. Sch. and Northeastern Univ.
D120
I 622.23 The myth of energy balance: is food
really making children fat?
H. Xue, Y. Wu, H-J. Chen and Y.
Wang. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg Sch. of Publ. Hlth.
D121
II 622.24 Relationship between egg consumption
patterns and nutrient intake, diet quality, weight measures, and
cardiovascular risk factors 2001-2008 NHANES.
T.A. Nicklas,
C.E. O’Neil and V.L. Fulgoni III. Baylor Col. of Med., LSU
AgCtr. and Nutr. Impact LLC, Battle Creek.
D122
I 622.25 Candy consumption in childhood is not
predictive of cardiovascular risk factors in young adults?The
Bogalusa Heart Study.
T.A. Nicklas, C.E. O’Neil and Y. Liu.
Baylor Col. of Med. and LSU AgCtr.
D123
II 622.26 A food addiction scale measurement in
two cohorts of middle-aged and older women.
A.J. Flint, A.
Gearhardt, W. Corbin, K. Brownell, A. Field and E. Rimm.
Harvard Sch. of Publ. Hlth., Univ. of Michigan, Arizona State
Univ., Tempe, Yale Univ. and Boston ariChildren’s Hosp.
D124
I 622.27 Dietary protein and risk of obesity
and central adiposity in middle-aged and older adults in
Framingham.
S.R. Hasnain, J.R. Buendia, M.R. Singer and
L.L. Moore. Boston Univ. Sch. of Med.
D125
II 622.28 Effects of high-fiber snacks on health-
related quality of life in a sample of school-aged children.
S.L.
Baker, K.L. Reidenbach, S.D. McCabe, M.C. Brauchla and S.
Kranz. Purdue Univ.
D126
I 622.29 Relationship of cocaine use with
markers of body mass index and body composition and HIV
disease progression.
S. Pedamallu, A. Campa, S. Lai, Y. Li,
J.B. Page and S.S. Martinez. R. Stempel Col. of Publ. Hlth. &
Soc. Work, Florida Intl. Univ., Johns Hopkins Univ. and Univ. of
Miami, Coral Gables.
D127
II 622.30 Breastfeeding improves biochemical
control in children with phenylketonuria.
E. O’Sullivan, F.
Boyle, S. Mehta and J. Kearney. Cornell Univ., Dublin Inst. of
Technol. and Natl. Ctr. for Inherited Metab. Disorders, Dublin,
Ireland.
D128
I 622.31 Trends in dietary carbohydrate
consumption from 1991-2008 in the Framingham Heart Study
offspring cohort.
N. Makarem, M. Scott, P. Quatromoni, P.
Jacques and N. Parekh. NYU, Boston Univ. and USDA and
Friedman Sch. of Nutr., Tufts Univ.
623. NUTRITION EDUCATION
Poster
(Sponsored by: Nutrition Education RIS)
s
un
. 7:30
am
—B
oston
C
onvention
& e
xhiBition
C
enter
,
e
xhiBit
h
alls
a-B
Presentation time: 12:45
pm
-1:45
pm
(I); 1:45
pm
-2:45
pm
(II)
D129
I 623.1 Collaborative engaged research:
rethinking food decision-making and nutrition education.
A.M.H.
Gillespie and B.S. Craig. Cornell Univ. and Washington State
Univ.
D130
II 623.2 Academic experts’ perceptions related
to a positive mealtime environment in childcare settings.
H.A.
Isgrig, S.C. Mita and L.S. Goodell. North Carolina State Univ.
D131
Dostları ilə paylaş: |