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Category: 14. Physical health, conventional medicine,
and folk medicine
BELL003. Bell, Ronnie Antonio. Nutrient
intake and effectiveness of a community-based nutrition education program
in reducing dietary cancer risk in adult Lumbee Indian women in Robeson
County, North Carolina. Dissertation. U of North Carolina at Greensboro,
1993.
Publication type: Dissertation (doctoral)
Bell obtained information on intake from among
41 dietary constituents from 120 Lumbee women in two age groups (21-40
(64%) and 41-60). He also measured their nutritional intake using
a 3-day food record, 24-hour recall, and a food frequency questionnaire.
Another questionnaire gathered information on health, eating habits, and
demographics. This data on Lumbee women was compared to data gathered
through the NHANES II and NFCS national surveys and from studies of other
Native Americans. Bell also administered a nutrition education program
to 29 Lumbee women in six weekly sessions, assessing the results using
a pretest, two posttests, and a 3-day food record.
Bell's research hypotheses were that the diet of Lumbee
women was lower in fiber and higher in fat and calories than is recommended
and that a community-based, culturally sensitive education program could
achieve changes in diet that would lower their cancer risks. The
first study found that percentage of calories from fat was higher (13-30%)
than recommendations of national health organizations but was still much
like averages from national surveys. Percentage of calories from
carbohydrates was somewhat lower than recommended but, again, was much
like national averages.
Results on all other parameters of the food frequency
questionnaire compared closely to both recommendations and U.S. averages.
92% of Lumbee women surveyed said they considered themselves healthy, but
52% considered their diet not good or poor. 48% exercise on a regular
basis, 23% smoke, and 11% consume alcohol. 38% take a vitamin supplement
regularly. The nutrition education program did not cause significant
changes in the three month period but did achieve improvements in eating
patterns. The dissertation's extensive appendices include tables
of results from the tests.
Note: Author is Lumbee.
Additional subjects: Cancer | Diet | Lumbee women
This annotation was edited on: June 13, 2002
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