960化工网
Community duplicate diet methodology: A new tool for estimating dietary exposures to pesticides†
Lisa Jo Melnyk,Michelle McCombs,G. Gordon Brown,James Raymer,Marcia Nishioka,Stephanie Buehler,Natalie Freeman,Larry C. Michael
Journal of Environmental Monitoring Pub Date : 11/03/2011 00:00:00 , DOI:10.1039/C1EM10611B
Abstract

An observational field study was conducted to assess the feasibility of a community duplicate diet collection method; a dietary monitoring tool that is population-based. The purpose was to establish an alternative procedure to duplicate diet sampling that would be more efficient for a large, defined population, e.g., in the National Children's Study (NCS). Questionnaire data and food samples were collected in a residence so as not to lose the important component of storage, preparation, and handling in a contaminated microenvironment. The participants included nine Hispanic women of child bearing age living in Apopka, FL, USA. Foods highly consumed by Hispanic women were identified based on national food frequency questionnaires and prioritized by permethrin residue concentrations as measured for the Pesticide Data Program. Participants filled out questionnaires to determine if highly consumed foods were commonly eaten by them and to assess the collection protocol for the food samples. Measureable levels of permethrin were found in 54% of the samples. Questionnaire responses indicated that the collection of the community duplicate diet was feasible for a defined population.

Graphical abstract: Community duplicate diet methodology: A new tool for estimating dietary exposures to pesticides
平台客服
平台客服
平台在线客服