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Title: Dietary intake in the lower Mississippi delta region: results from the Foods of our Delta Study. Author: Champagne CM, Bogle ML, McGee BB, Yadrick K, Allen HR, Kramer TR, Simpson P, Gossett J, Weber J, Lower Mississippi Delta Nutrition Intervention Research Initiative. Journal: J Am Diet Assoc; 2004 Feb; 104(2):199-207. PubMed ID: 14760567. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To collect and evaluate food intake data from a culturally diverse population and compare with national survey data. DESIGN: The Foods Of Our Delta Study was a baseline, cross-sectional survey that utilized random-digit dialing methodology to identify the sample. Food intake was obtained from a 24-hour dietary recall administered by computer-assisted telephone interview using the multiple-pass method. SUBJECTS/SETTING: One thousand seven hundred fifty-one adults and 485 children in the Lower Mississippi Delta (Delta) of Louisiana, Arkansas, and Mississippi. STATISTICAL ANALYSES PERFORMED: Comparisons of subsets within the Delta were made using weighted t tests. Comparisons of the Delta with the overall US population from the US Department of Agriculture Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals and with the Dietary Reference Intakes were made using independent sample z tests of weighted estimates. RESULTS: Energy intake did not differ between the Delta and the US populations. Intakes of protein were lower, fat higher, and certain micronutrients lower in Delta adults than in US adults. Delta adults had a 20% lower intake of fruits and vegetables than the US adults and generally poorer adherence to recommendations of the Food Guide Pyramid. African American Delta adults generally consumed less-optimal diets than white Delta adults. Delta children had diets similar to children of the Continuing Survey of Food Intakes by Individuals sample population, but lower intakes were noted for vitamins A, C, riboflavin, and B-6, and for calcium and iron. APPLICATIONS/CONCLUSIONS: Data such as these will help drive intervention development in this rural region and perhaps set the stage for research in similarly impoverished areas.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]