Background: Sugar intakes have increased worldwide in parallel with the obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease epidemics indicating that sugar may be partly responsible. In New Zealand (NZ) the prevalence of these conditions are higher in the Pacific Island population than in the general population. Thus there is a need to develop a valid and reliable instrument to measure sugar intakes to establish whether high sugars intake, particularly fructose, are associated with chronic disease risk. The food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) is a relatively quick, simple and cost effective method to measure food and beverage consumption in large epidemiological studies. Objective: The present study aimed to develop, pretest and conduct a prelimin...
Sri Lanka is undergoing nutritional transition and diet-related chronic diseases are emerging as an ...
Background: Diabetes, obesity, gout, hypertension; these are all global epidemics that have been on ...
Description: ix, 58, 11, [25] leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. Notes: Cover title. University of Otago departm...
Background: Sugar intakes have increased worldwide in parallel with the obesity, diabetes and cardio...
Background: Chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes, obesity, gout and cardiovascular disease have ...
Background: Evidence linking fructose intakes to gout, type 2 diabetes and obesity is growing. This ...
Background: Worldwide, obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular and metabolic disease epidemics have increa...
Background: Global rates of non-communicable disease have risen at an unprecedented rate, leading to...
We evaluated the validity and reproducibility of estimated sugar intakes using a food frequency ques...
Background: Guam is a US territory in the western Pacific with a diverse population that includes un...
The assessment of diets in multi-ethnic cosmopolitan settings is challenging. A semi-quantitative 16...
Sugar intake is a potentially important aspect of diet which has not previously been validated in th...
Robust evidence has shown that sugar is a major contributor to obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases...
SD = 14.9, p<0.05) or 11.8%. Pearson correlation was r=0.74 (p<0.001) for the two methods while Spea...
Abstract Background Assessment of habitual diet is important in investigations of diet-disease relat...
Sri Lanka is undergoing nutritional transition and diet-related chronic diseases are emerging as an ...
Background: Diabetes, obesity, gout, hypertension; these are all global epidemics that have been on ...
Description: ix, 58, 11, [25] leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. Notes: Cover title. University of Otago departm...
Background: Sugar intakes have increased worldwide in parallel with the obesity, diabetes and cardio...
Background: Chronic diseases such as type 2 diabetes, obesity, gout and cardiovascular disease have ...
Background: Evidence linking fructose intakes to gout, type 2 diabetes and obesity is growing. This ...
Background: Worldwide, obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular and metabolic disease epidemics have increa...
Background: Global rates of non-communicable disease have risen at an unprecedented rate, leading to...
We evaluated the validity and reproducibility of estimated sugar intakes using a food frequency ques...
Background: Guam is a US territory in the western Pacific with a diverse population that includes un...
The assessment of diets in multi-ethnic cosmopolitan settings is challenging. A semi-quantitative 16...
Sugar intake is a potentially important aspect of diet which has not previously been validated in th...
Robust evidence has shown that sugar is a major contributor to obesity and Non-Communicable Diseases...
SD = 14.9, p<0.05) or 11.8%. Pearson correlation was r=0.74 (p<0.001) for the two methods while Spea...
Abstract Background Assessment of habitual diet is important in investigations of diet-disease relat...
Sri Lanka is undergoing nutritional transition and diet-related chronic diseases are emerging as an ...
Background: Diabetes, obesity, gout, hypertension; these are all global epidemics that have been on ...
Description: ix, 58, 11, [25] leaves : ill. ; 30 cm. Notes: Cover title. University of Otago departm...