23 results on '"Veer, Pieter Van 't"'
Search Results
2. How do regional and demographic differences in diets affect the health and environmental impact in China?
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Cai, Hongyi, Biesbroek, Sander, Chang, Zhiyao, Wen, Xin, Fan, Shenggen, Veer, Pieter van 't, and Talsma, Elise F.
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- 2024
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3. A Sustainability Compass for policy navigation to sustainable food systems
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Hebinck, Aniek, Zurek, Monika, Achterbosch, Thom, Forkman, Björn, Kuijsten, Anneleen, Kuiper, Marijke, Nørrung, Birgit, Veer, Pieter van ’t, and Leip, Adrian
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- 2021
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4. Dietary choices and environmental impact in four European countries
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Mertens, Elly, Kuijsten, Anneleen, van Zanten, Hannah HE., Kaptijn, Gerdine, Dofková, Marcela, Mistura, Lorenza, D'Addezio, Laura, Turrini, Aida, Dubuisson, Carine, Havard, Sabrina, Trolle, Ellen, Geleijnse, Johanna M., and Veer, Pieter van ’t
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- 2019
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5. A scientific transition to support the 21st century dietary transition
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Tufford, Adèle Rae, Brennan, Lorainne, Trijp, Hans van, D'Auria, Sabato, Feskens, Edith, Finglas, Paul, Kok, Frans, Kolesárová, Adriana, Poppe, Krijn, Zimmermann, Karin, Veer, Pieter van ’t, Urban Futures, and Urban Futures
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Marketing and Consumer Behaviour ,Global Nutrition ,Wereldvoeding ,Programmamanagement ,Consumer behaviour ,Diet transition ,Nutritional health ,Research infrastructures ,Sustainability ,Consument & Keten ,Marktkunde en Consumentengedrag ,Consumer and Chain ,VLAG ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Background: Eating habits must change substantially in order to address the urgent societal challenges of personal, public and planetary health. Research surrounding various facets of the dietary transition remains siloed, hindering breakthroughs. Scope and approach: We argue the scientific case for transdisciplinary research centered around the transition to healthy, sustainable, and acceptable diets. This transition requires tackling the broad societal challenges of engaging consumers in the diet transition, improving nutritional health and achieving environmental sustainability of foods and food systems. Key findings: The crucial synergies and trade-offs from addressing single challenges in isolation are discussed, as well as obstacles when considering the collaboration between the multiple scientific disciplines concerned with the dietary transition. Currently, interactions between these challenges remain understudied and/or ambiguous, in part due to a lack of interoperable data and standards. Intersectional research entry points acting at the intersection of the three challenges are explored: food taste and texture reformulation, food pricing strategies and food literacy. The implementation of such cross-cutting interventions urgently requires both the generation of new data and exploitation of the breadth of existing data. Researchers must therefore be facilitated to find, access and use interoperable data to model and measure food intake and all its determinants. Conclusions: The dietary transition requires underpinning by a research infrastructure that supports access to transdisciplinary data, facilities and research tools, alongside training and capacity building. Filling these unmet data, tools and training needs is the first step towards delivering breakthrough innovations to foods and food environments, mobilizing consumers to engage in the dietary transition.
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- 2023
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6. A scientific transition to support the 21st century dietary transition
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Urban Futures, Tufford, Adèle Rae, Brennan, Lorainne, Trijp, Hans van, D'Auria, Sabato, Feskens, Edith, Finglas, Paul, Kok, Frans, Kolesárová, Adriana, Poppe, Krijn, Zimmermann, Karin, Veer, Pieter van ’t, Urban Futures, Tufford, Adèle Rae, Brennan, Lorainne, Trijp, Hans van, D'Auria, Sabato, Feskens, Edith, Finglas, Paul, Kok, Frans, Kolesárová, Adriana, Poppe, Krijn, Zimmermann, Karin, and Veer, Pieter van ’t
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- 2023
7. Exploring healthy and climate-friendly diets for Danish adults:an optimization study using quadratic programming
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Nordman, Matilda, Lassen, Anne Dahl, Stockmarr, Anders, Veer, Pieter van ’t, Biesbroek, Sander, Trolle, Ellen, Nordman, Matilda, Lassen, Anne Dahl, Stockmarr, Anders, Veer, Pieter van ’t, Biesbroek, Sander, and Trolle, Ellen
- Abstract
Background: A transition to healthy and sustainable diets has the potential to improve human and planetary health but diets need to meet requirements for nutritional adequacy, health, environmental targets, and be acceptable to consumers. Objective: The objective of this study was to derive a nutritionally adequate and healthy diet that has the least deviation possible from the average observed diet of Danish adults while aiming for a greenhouse gas emission (GHGE) reduction of 31%, corresponding to the GHGE level of the Danish plant-rich diet, which lays the foundation for the current healthy and sustainable food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) in Denmark. Methods: With an objective function minimizing the departure from the average observed diet of Danish adults, four diet optimizations were run using quadratic programming, with different combinations of diet constraints: (1) nutrients only (Nutri), (2) nutrients and health-based targets for food amounts (NutriHealth), (3) GHGE only (GHGE), and finally, (4) combined nutrient, health and GHGE constraints (NutriHealthGHGE). Results: The GHGE of the four optimized diets were 3.93 kg CO2-eq (Nutri), 3.77 kg CO2-eq (NutriHealth) and 3.01 kg CO2-eq (GHGE and NutriHealthGHGE), compared to 4.37 kg CO2-eq in the observed diet. The proportion of energy from animal-based foods was 21%–25% in the optimized diets compared to 34% in the observed diet and 18% in the Danish plant-rich diet. Moreover, compared to the average Danish diet, the NutriHealthGHGE diet contained more grains and starches (44 E% vs. 28 E%), nuts (+230%), fatty fish (+89%), eggs (+47%); less cheese (−73%), animal-based fats (−76%), total meat (−42%); and very limited amounts of ruminant meat, soft drinks, and alcoholic beverages (all-90%), while the amounts of legumes and seeds were unchanged. On average, the mathemati
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- 2023
8. Exploring healthy and climate-friendly diets for Danish adults: an optimization study using quadratic programming
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Nordman, Matilda, Lassen, Anne Dahl, Stockmarr, Anders, Veer, Pieter van ’t, Biesbroek, Sander, and Trolle, Ellen
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Dietary guidelines ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Dietary intake ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,SDG 13 - Climate Action ,Diet optimization ,Quadratic programming (QP) ,Greenhouse gas emission ,Sustainable diets ,Food Science - Abstract
Background: A transition to healthy and sustainable diets has the potential to improve human and planetary health but diets need to meet requirements for nutritional adequacy, health, environmental targets, and be acceptable to consumers.Objective: The objective of this study was to derive a nutritionally adequate and healthy diet that has the least deviation possible from the average observed diet of Danish adults while aiming for a greenhouse gas emission (GHGE) reduction of 31%, corresponding to the GHGE level of the Danish plant-rich diet, which lays the foundation for the current healthy and sustainable food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) in Denmark.Methods: With an objective function minimizing the departure from the average observed diet of Danish adults, four diet optimizations were run using quadratic programming, with different combinations of diet constraints: (1) nutrients only (Nutri), (2) nutrients and health-based targets for food amounts (NutriHealth), (3) GHGE only (GHGE), and finally, (4) combined nutrient, health and GHGE constraints (NutriHealthGHGE).Results: The GHGE of the four optimized diets were 3.93 kg CO2-eq (Nutri), 3.77 kg CO2-eq (NutriHealth) and 3.01 kg CO2-eq (GHGE and NutriHealthGHGE), compared to 4.37 kg CO2-eq in the observed diet. The proportion of energy from animal-based foods was 21%–25% in the optimized diets compared to 34% in the observed diet and 18% in the Danish plant-rich diet. Moreover, compared to the average Danish diet, the NutriHealthGHGE diet contained more grains and starches (44 E% vs. 28 E%), nuts (+230%), fatty fish (+89%), eggs (+47%); less cheese (−73%), animal-based fats (−76%), total meat (−42%); and very limited amounts of ruminant meat, soft drinks, and alcoholic beverages (all-90%), while the amounts of legumes and seeds were unchanged. On average, the mathematically optimized NutriHealthGHGE diet showed a smaller deviation from the average Danish diet compared to the Danish plant-rich diet (38% vs. 169%, respectively).Conclusion: The final optimized diet presented in this study represents an alternative way of composing a nutritionally adequate and healthy diet that has the same estimated GHGE as a diet consistent with the climate-friendly FBDGs in Denmark. As this optimized diet may be more acceptable for some consumers, it might help to facilitate the transition toward more healthy and sustainable diets in the Danish population.
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- 2023
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9. Simulation model accurately estimates total dietary iodine intake
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Verkaik-Kloosterman, Janneke, Veer, Pieter van 't, and Ocke, Marga C.
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Iodine in the body -- Research ,Ingestion -- Research ,Food/cooking/nutrition - Abstract
One problem with estimating iodine intake is the lack of detailed data about the discretionary use of iodized kitchen salt and iodization of industrially processed foods. To be able to take into account these uncertainties in estimating iodine intake, a simulation model combining deterministic and probabilistic techniques was developed. Data from the Dutch National Food Consumption Survey (1997-1998) and an update of the Food Composition database were used to simulate 3 different scenarios: Dutch iodine legislation until July 2008, Dutch iodine legislation after July 2008, and a potential future situation. Results from studies measuring iodine excretion during the former legislation are comparable with the iodine intakes estimated with our model. For both former and current legislation, iodine intake was adequate for a large part of the Dutch population, but some young children (
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- 2009
10. How we will produce the evidence-based EURRECA toolkit to support nutrition and food policy
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Ashwell, Margaret, Lambert, Janet P., Alles, Martine S., Branca, Francesco, Bucchini, Luca, Brzozowska, Anna, de Groot, Lisette C. P. G. M., Dhonukshe-Rutten, Rosalie A. M., Dwyer, Johanna T., Fairweather-Tait, Sue, Koletzko, Berthold, Pavlovic, Mirjana, Raats, Monique M., Serra-Majem, Lluis, Smith, Rhonda, van Ommen, Ben, Veer, Pieter van ’t, von Rosen, Julia, Pijls, Loek T. J., and on behalf of the EURRECA Network
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- 2008
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11. Potential Impact of Meat Replacers on Health and Environmental Sustainability in European Diets
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Mertens, Elly, primary, Biesbroek, Sander, primary, Dofkova, Marcela, primary, Mistura, Lorenza, primary, D'Addezio, Laura, primary, Turrini, Aida, primary, Dubuisson, Carine, primary, Havard, Sabrine, primary, Trolle, Ellen, primary, Geleijnse, Marianne, primary, and Veer, Pieter van ’t, primary
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- 2020
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12. A prospective cohort study on toenail selenium levels and risk of gastrointestinal cancer
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Brandt, Piet A. van den, Goldbohm, R. Alexandra, Veer, Pieter van 't, Bode, Peter, Dorant, Elisabeth, Hermus, Rudolph J.J., and Sturmans, Ferd
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Stomach cancer -- Risk factors ,Toenails -- Physiological aspects ,Selenosis -- Health aspects ,Colorectal cancer -- Risk factors ,Health - Abstract
Background: Various animal studies and ecologic studies suggest an inverse association between low dietary selenium intake and risk of various types of cancer. Purpose: The goal of this prospective cohort study was to investigate the association between toenail selenium levels and risks of stomach cancer and colorectal cancer. Methods: Our cohort study on diet and cancer started in The Netherlands in 1986 with enrollment of 120 852 subjects aged 55-69 years. Of this number, 58 279 were men and 62 573 were women. Following the case-cohort approach for analysis of the data, we randomly selected from the cohort a subcohort of 3500 subjects (1688 men and 1812 women). After 3.3 years of follow-up, 155 incident cases of microscopically confirmed stomach cancer, 313 cases of colon cancer, and 166 cases of rectal cancer had been detected in the cohort. Toenail selenium data were available for 104 patients with stomach cancer, 234 with colon cancer, and 113 with rectal cancer and for 2459 subjects from the subcohort. Results: In a multivariate analysis, the relative rates (RRs) of stomach cancer for subjects in increasing quintiles of toenail selenium level were 1.00, 0.44, 0.59, 0.84, and 0.64 (trend, P = .491). For men, there was some evidence for an inverse association between toenail selenium levels and stomach cancer: The RR for those in the highest compared with the lowest quintile of toenail selenium was 0.40 (95% confidence interval = 0.17-0.96), but the trend was not statistically significant (P = .136). For stomach cancer in women, there was no negative association with toenail selenium levels. Toenail selenium level was not associated with the risk of colon or rectal cancer. After exclusion of cases diagnosed in the 1st year of follow-up, the RRs of colon cancer for increasing quintiles of toenail selenium were 1.00, 1.27, 1.17, 0.75, and 1.07 (trend, P = .544); for rectal cancer, RR estimates were 1.00, 1.73, 0.83, 1.58, and 1.12 (trend, P = .890). Conclusions: These data support a suggestive but inconsistent inverse association between selenium levels and risk of stomach, cancer. Our findings, like those of other studies, do not suggest an inverse association with risk of colorectal cancer. [J Natl Cancer Inst 85:224-229, 1993]
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- 1993
13. Dietary habits, sexual maturation, and plasma hormones in pubertal girls: a longitudinal study
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Ridder, Christine M. de, Thijssen, Jos H.H., Veer, Pieter Van 't, Duuren, Rianne van, Bruning, Peter F., Zonderland, Maria L., and Erich, Wietze, B.M.
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Growth -- Health aspects ,Fiber in human nutrition -- Physiological aspects ,Puberty -- Health aspects ,Menarche -- Health aspects ,Breast -- Growth ,Estrogen -- Measurement ,Breast cancer -- Risk factors ,Food/cooking/nutrition ,Health - Abstract
Several studies have reported that girls are reaching puberty and menarche (onset of menstruation) at a much younger age than they were several decades ago. This has been attributed to changes in dietary habits. Studies have reported that the amount and distribution of body fat may play an important role in determining menarche. Female sex steroids such as estrogen are required for sexual development and they are influenced by the distribution of body fat. Also, it has been reported that dietary fiber may reduce the amount of estrogen in the body by increasing the amount of estrogen that is lost from the body in feces. To investigate the relationship between diet, hormone levels and menarche, 63 pubertal girls were studied. The effects of dietary fiber and vegetable protein on menarche and breast development were determined. The girls who consumed less dietary fiber had higher blood levels of estrogen, had earlier breast development and reached menarche earlier than those who consumed more fiber in their diet. The results of this study suggest that a low-fiber diet may increase the rate of breast development and cause menarche to occur at an earlier age. These findings are significant because it has been reported that girls who mature earlier may have a greater risk of developing breast cancer. (Consumer Summary produced by Reliance Medical Information, Inc.)
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- 1991
14. Food identification by barcode scanning in the Netherlands: a quality assessment of labelled food product databases underlying popular nutrition applications
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Maringer, Marcus, primary, Wisse-Voorwinden, Nancy, additional, Veer, Pieter van ’t, additional, and Geelen, Anouk, additional
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- 2018
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15. A short-term intervention with selenium affects expression of genes implicated in the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition in the prostate
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Gils-Kok, Dieuwertje, van, Kiemeney, Lambertus A.L.M., Verhaegh, Gerald W., Schalken, Jack A., Lin, Emile N.J.T., van, Sedelaar, J.P.M., Witjes, J.A., Hulsbergen-van de Kaa, Christina A., Veer, Pieter, van 't, Kampman, Ellen, Afman, Lydia A., Gils-Kok, Dieuwertje, van, Kiemeney, Lambertus A.L.M., Verhaegh, Gerald W., Schalken, Jack A., Lin, Emile N.J.T., van, Sedelaar, J.P.M., Witjes, J.A., Hulsbergen-van de Kaa, Christina A., Veer, Pieter, van 't, Kampman, Ellen, and Afman, Lydia A.
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In parallel with the inconsistency in observational studies and chemoprevention trials, the mechanisms by which selenium affects prostate cancer risk have not been elucidated. We conducted a randomized, placebo-controlled trial to examine the effects of a short-term intervention with selenium on gene expression in non-malignant prostate tissue. Twenty-three men received 300 μg selenium per day in the form of selenized yeast (n=12) or a placebo (n=11) during 5 weeks. Prostate biopsies collected from the transition zone before and after intervention were analysed for 15 participants (n=8 selenium, n=7 placebo). Pathway analyses revealed that the intervention with selenium was associated with down-regulated expression of genes involved in cellular migration, invasion, remodeling and immune responses. Specifically, expression of well-established epithelial markers, such as E-cadherin and epithelial cell adhesion molecule EPCAM, was up-regulated, while the mesenchymal markers vimentin and fibronectin were down-regulated after intervention with selenium. This implies an inhibitory effect of selenium on the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Moreover, selenium was associated with down-regulated expression of genes involved in wound healing and inflammation; processes which are both related to EMT. In conclusion, our explorative data showed that selenium affected expression of genes implicated in EMT in the transition zone of the prostate.
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- 2017
16. The 2015 Dutch food-based dietary guidelines
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Kromhout, D., Spaaij, C. J.K., De Goede, J., Weggemans, R. M., Brug, Johannes, Geleijnse, Johanna M., Van Goudoever, Johannes B., Hoes, Arno W., Hopman, Maria T.E., Iestra, Jolein A., Mensink, Ronald P., Pijl, Hanno, Romijn, Johannes A., Schols, Annemie M.W.J., Seidell, Jaap C., Veer, Pieter Van T., Visser, Marjolein, and Zwietering, Marcel H.
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0301 basic medicine ,Nutrition and Disease ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Review ,Levensmiddelenmicrobiologie ,Nutrition Policy ,law.invention ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Environmental health ,Voeding en Ziekte ,Vegetables ,Diabetes Mellitus ,medicine ,Journal Article ,Life Science ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Prospective cohort study ,Netherlands ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,VLAG ,Human Nutrition & Health ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,business.industry ,Humane Voeding & Gezondheid ,Evidence-based medicine ,Guideline ,Food Patterns ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,Diet ,Biotechnology ,Review Literature as Topic ,Systematic review ,Seafood ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Food ,Fruit ,Food Microbiology ,Observational study ,business - Abstract
The objective of this study was to derive food-based dietary guidelines for the Dutch population. The dietary guidelines are based on 29 systematic reviews of English language meta-analyses in PubMed summarizing randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies on nutrients, foods and food patterns and the risk of 10 major chronic diseases: coronary heart disease, stroke, heart failure, diabetes, breast cancer, colorectal cancer, lung cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, dementia and depression. The committee also selected three causal risk factors for cardiovascular diseases or diabetes: systolic blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and body weight. Findings were categorized as strong or weak evidence, inconsistent effects, too little evidence or effect unlikely for experimental and observational data separately. Next, the committee selected only findings with a strong level of evidence for deriving the guidelines. Convincing evidence was based on strong evidence from the experimental data either or not in combination with strong evidence from prospective cohort studies. Plausible evidence was based on strong evidence from prospective cohort studies only. A general guideline to eat a more plant food-based dietary pattern and limit consumption of animal-based food and 15 specific guidelines have been formulated. There are 10 new guidelines on legumes, nuts, meat, dairy produce, cereal products, fats and oils, tea, coffee and sugar-containing beverages. Three guidelines on vegetables, fruits, fish and alcoholic beverages have been sharpened, and the 2006 guideline on salt stayed the same. A separate guideline has been formulated on nutrient supplements. Completely food-based dietary guidelines can be derived in a systematic and transparent way.
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- 2016
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17. Food identification by barcode scanning in the Netherlands: a quality assessment of labelled food product databases underlying popular nutrition applications.
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Maringer, Marcus, Wisse-Voorwinden, Nancy, Veer, Pieter van 't, and Geelen, Anouk
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NUTRITION ,FOOD diaries ,APPLICATION stores ,DATABASES ,FOOD quality - Abstract
Objective: The quality of labelled food product databases underlying popular diet applications (apps) with barcode scanners was investigated.Design: Product identification rates for the scanned products and the availability and accuracy of nutrient values were calculated.Setting: One hundred food products were selected from the two largest supermarket chains in the Netherlands. Using the barcode scanners of the selected apps, the products were scanned and the results recorded as food diary entries. The collected data were exported.Subjects: Seven diet apps with barcode scanner and food recording feature were selected from the Google Play and Apple app stores.Results: Energy values were available for 99 % of the scanned products, of which on average 79 % deviated not more than 5 % from the true value. MyFitnessPal provided values for sixteen nutrients, while Virtuagym Food and Yazio provided values for only four nutrients. MyFitnessPal also showed the largest percentage of correctly identified products (i.e. 96 %) and SparkPeople the smallest (i.e. 5 %). The accuracy of the provided nutrient values varied greatly between apps and nutrients.Conclusions: While energy was the most consistently and accurately reported value, the availability and accuracy of other values varied greatly between apps. Whereas popular diet apps with barcode scanners might be valuable tools for dietary assessments on the product and energy level, they appear less suitable for assessments on the nutrient level. The presence of user-generated database entries implies that the availability of food products might vary depending on the size and diversity of an app's user base. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2019
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18. Identification of biomarkers for intake of protein from meat, dairy products and grains: a controlled dietary intervention study
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Altorf-van der Kuil, Wieke, primary, Brink, Elizabeth J., additional, Boetje, Martine, additional, Siebelink, Els, additional, Bijlsma, Sabina, additional, Engberink, Marielle F., additional, Veer, Pieter van 't, additional, Tomé, Daniel, additional, Bakker, Stephan J. L., additional, van Baak, Marleen A., additional, and Geleijnse, Johanna M., additional
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- 2013
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19. The association of chromium with the risk of a first myocardial infaction in men. The EURAMIC Study.
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Guallar, Eliseo, primary, Jimenez, F. Javier, additional, Veer, Pieter van ’t, additional, Bode, Peter, additional, Martin-Moreno, Jose M, additional, and Kok, Frans J., additional
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- 2001
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20. Measuring nutritional exposures including biomarkers
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Veer, Pieter Van 'T, primary
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- 1994
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21. Dietary fiber, beta-carotene and breast cancer: Results from a case-control study
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Veer, Pieter Van 'T, primary, Kolb, Corine M., additional, Verhoef, Petra, additional, Kok, Frans J., additional, Schouten, Evert G., additional, Hermus, Rudolph J. J., additional, and Sturmans, Ferd, additional
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- 1990
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22. Low Toenail Chromium Concentration and Increased Risk of Nonfatal Myocardial Infarction.
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Guallar, Eliseo, Jiménez, F. Javier, Veer, Pieter van 't, Bode, Peter, Riemersma, Rudolph A., Gómez-Aracena, Jorge, Kark, Jeremy D., Arab, Lenore, Kok, Frans J., and Martín-Moreno, José M.
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CHROMIUM ,INSULIN ,GLUCOSE ,HIGH density lipoproteins ,EPIDEMIOLOGY ,CARDIOVASCULAR diseases ,MYOCARDIAL infarction - Abstract
Chromium intake may increase insulin sensitivity, glucose tolerance, and the ratio of high density lipoprotein cholesterol to low density lipoprotein cholesterol. However, the epidemiologic evidence on the association between chromium and cardiovascular disease is very limited. To determine whether low toenail chromium concentrations were associated with risk of nonfatal myocardial infarction, the authors conducted an incident, population-based, case-control study in eight European countries and Israel in 1991–1992. Cases (n = 684) were men with a first diagnosis of myocardial infarction recruited from the coronary units of participating hospitals. Controls (n = 724) were men selected randomly from population registers (five study centers) or through other sources, such as hospitalized patients (three centers), general practitioners' practices (one center), or relatives or friends of cases (one center). Toenail chromium concentration was assessed by neutron activation analysis. Average toenail chromium concentrations were 1.10 μg/g in cases (95% confidence interval: 1.01, 1.18) and 1.30 μg/g in controls (95% CI: 1.21, 1.40). Multivariate odds ratios for quintiles 2–5 were 0.82 (95% CI: 0.52, 1.31), 0.68 (95% CI: 0.43, 1.08), 0.60 (95% CI: 0.37, 0.97), and 0.59 (95% CI: 0.37, 0.95). Toenail chromium concentration was inversely associated with the risk of a first myocardial infarction in men. These results add to an increasing body of evidence that points to the importance of chromium for cardiovascular health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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23. THE AUTHORS REPLY.
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Feunekes, Gerda I. J., Veer, Pieter van 't, Staveren, Wija A. van, and Kok, Frans J.
- Published
- 2009
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