Keyword search (3,172 papers available) |
Author(s): Danieles PK, Ybarra M, Van Hulst A, Barnett TA, Mathieu MÈ, Kakinami L, Drouin O, Bigras JL, Henderson M...
INTRODUCTION: Attrition in pediatric weight management programs is notoriously high. Greater understanding of its determinants is needed to inform retention strategies. We identified determinants o...
Article GUID: 33608233
Author(s): O'Loughlin E, Sabiston CM, Kakinami L, McGrath JJ, Consalvo M, O'Loughlin JL, Barnett TA,
CONCLUSIONS: RTEX is a psychometrically sound scale with four factors that measure reasons to exergame. Replication of these findings is needed in larger, more diverse samples.
Article GUID: 32538792
Author(s): Kakinami L, Knäuper B, Brunet J
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2020 May 04;: Authors: Kakinami L, Knäuper B, Brunet J
Article GUID: 32366587
Author(s): Miller MB, Roumanis MJ, Kakinami L, Dover GC
J Pain Res. 2020;13:273-284 Authors: Miller MB, Roumanis MJ, Kakinami L, Dover GC
Article GUID: 32099451
Author(s): O'Loughlin EK, Dutczak H, Kakinami L, Consalvo M, McGrath JJ, Barnett TA
Games Health J. 2020 Feb 04;: Authors: O'Loughlin EK, Dutczak H, Kakinami L, Consalvo M, McGrath JJ, Barnett TA
Article GUID: 32017864
Author(s): O'Loughlin EK, Barnett TA, McGrath JJ, Consalvo M, Kakinami L
JMIR Serious Games. 2019 Jul 31;7(2):e13335 Authors: O'Loughlin EK, Barnett TA, McGrath JJ, Consalvo M, Kakinami L
Article GUID: 31368440
Author(s): Kakinami L, Barnett TA, Séguin L, Paradis G
Prev Med. 2015 Jun;75:18-22 Authors: Kakinami L, Barnett TA, Séguin L, Paradis G
Article GUID: 25797329
Author(s): Kakinami L, Houle-Johnson S, McGrath JJ
J Nutr Educ Behav. 2016 Jul-Aug;48(7):461-467.e1 Authors: Kakinami L, Houle-Johnson S, McGrath JJ
Article GUID: 27373860
Author(s): van Rassel CR, Bewski NA, O'loughlin EK, Wright A, Scheel DP, Puig L, Kakinami L
J Sports Med Phys Fitness. 2019 Apr;59(4):632-639 Authors: van Rassel CR, Bewski NA, O'loughlin EK, Wright A, Scheel DP, Puig L, Kakinami L
Article GUID: 30024123
Author(s): Kakinami L, O'Loughlin EK, Brunet J, Dugas EN, Constantin E, Sabiston CM, O'Loughlin J
Sleep Health. 2017 02;3(1):56-61 Authors: Kakinami L, O'Loughlin EK, Brunet J, Dugas EN, Constantin E, Sabiston CM, O'Loughlin J
Article GUID: 28346152
Author(s): Ghenadenik AE, Kakinami L, Van Hulst A, Henderson M, Barnett TA
Prev Med. 2018 06;111:35-40 Authors: Ghenadenik AE, Kakinami L, Van Hulst A, Henderson M, Barnett TA
Article GUID: 29462654
Author(s): Kakinami L, Wissa R, Khan R, Paradis G, Barnett TA, Gauvin L
Prev Med. 2018 08;113:147-152 Authors: Kakinami L, Wissa R, Khan R, Paradis G, Barnett TA, Gauvin L
Article GUID: 29753806
Author(s): Côté-Lussier C, Kakinami L, Danieles PK
Ego-centered relative neighborhood deprivation and reported dietary habits among youth.
Appetite. 2019 Jan 01;132:267-274
Authors: Côté-Lussier C, Kakinami L, Danieles PK
Abstract
Dietary habits are important precursors of...
Article GUID: 30473022
Author(s): Dugas EN, Sylvestre MP, O'Loughlin EK, Brunet J, Kakinami L, Constantin E, O'Loughlin J
Addict Behav. 2017 02;65:154-160 Authors: Dugas EN, Sylvestre MP, O'Loughlin EK, Brunet J, Kakinami L, Constantin E, O'Loughlin J
Article GUID: 27816041
Author(s): Cross NE, Carrier J, Postuma RB, Gosselin N, Kakinami L, Thompson C, Chouchou F, Dang-Vu TT
Sleep. 2019 May 15;: Authors: Cross NE, Carrier J, Postuma RB, Gosselin N, Kakinami L, Thompson C, Chouchou F, Dang-Vu TT
Article GUID: 31089710
Author(s): Kakinami L, Serbin LA, Stack DM, Karmaker SC, Ledingham JE, Schwartzman AE
Prev Med Rep. 2017 Dec;8:294-300 Authors: Kakinami L, Serbin LA, Stack DM, Karmaker SC, Ledingham JE, Schwartzman AE
Article GUID: 29255665
Author(s): Kakinami L, Houle-Johnson SA, Demissie Z, Santosa S, Fulton JE
Prev Med Rep. 2019 Mar;13:11-15 Authors: Kakinami L, Houle-Johnson SA, Demissie Z, Santosa S, Fulton JE
Article GUID: 30456053
Author(s): Houle-Johnson SA, Kakinami L
BMC Public Health. 2018 Dec 04;18(1):1343 Authors: Houle-Johnson SA, Kakinami L
Article GUID: 30514246
Author(s): Khalili-Mahani N, Smyrnova A, Kakinami L
J Med Internet Res. 2019 Apr 02;21(4):e11485 Authors: Khalili-Mahani N, Smyrnova A, Kakinami L
Article GUID: 30938685
Title: | Ego-centered relative neighborhood deprivation and reported dietary habits among youth. |
Authors: | Côté-Lussier C, Kakinami L, Danieles PK |
Link: | www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30473022?dopt=Abstract |
Category: | Appetite |
PMID: | 30473022 |
Dept Affiliation: | PERFORM
1 Department of Criminology and Centre for Research on Educational and Community Services (CRECS), University of Ottawa, 120 University, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5, Canada. Electronic address: ccotelus@uottawa.ca. 2 Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Concordia University PERFORM Centre, Concordia University, Canada. 3 Department of Mathematics and Statistics, Concordia University, Canada. |
Description: |
Ego-centered relative neighborhood deprivation and reported dietary habits among youth. Appetite. 2019 Jan 01;132:267-274 Authors: Côté-Lussier C, Kakinami L, Danieles PK Abstract Dietary habits are important precursors of childhood obesity. Youths' dietary habits may be constrained by the experience of deprivation due to social (e.g., family purchasing power) and physical (e.g., availability of fast food outlets in low-income neighborhoods) factors limiting dietary choices. This study considers whether a Yitzhaki-based index of ego-centered relative neighborhood deprivation explains dietary outcomes (i.e., reported healthful and unhealthful food consumption), adjusting for absolute deprivation. The Yitzhaki index takes into account the total incomes to which a youth is deprived in relation to a meaningful reference group, and the youth's position in the cumulative income distribution of this meaningful reference group. The study also considers whether the impact of deprivation on dietary outcomes is moderated by the experience of symptoms of depression. There was some indication that reported healthful food consumption was highest for youth who experienced low absolute deprivation (p?=?0.01) and low symptoms of depression (p?=?0.01), but high relative deprivation (p?=?0.001). These youth therefore appear to benefit from being both "better-off", and living among "better-off" individuals. The results for reported unhealthful food consumption were less robust. The results may therefore suggest that youth who are not detrimentally impacted by their relative deprivation, and who have the financial means to access healthful foods, have improved dietary outcomes. The findings suggest that while absolute deprivation plays a key role in explaining healthful food consumption, additional insights can be gleaned from considering youths' relative deprivation and indicators of their well-being. PMID: 30473022 [PubMed - in process] |