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1.
Nutrition Research and Practice ; : 315-325, 2013.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-179443

ABSTRACT

We evaluated folate status of child-bearing age women diagnosed with abnormal pap smear in the US post-folic acid (FA) fortification era and assessed the determinants of NTD-protective and supra-physiologic (SP) concentrations of folate. The distribution of 843 women according to NTD-protective concentrations of RBC folate, plasma folate and SP concentrations of plasma folate were tested in relation to demographic and life-style factors. Logistic regression models specified NTD-protective concentrations of RBC and plasma folate or SP concentrations of plasma folate as dependent variables and demographic and life-style factors as independent predictors of interest. More than 82% reached NTD-protective concentrations of RBC and plasma folate and ~30% reached SP concentrations of plasma folate. FA supplement use was associated with having SP concentrations of plasma folate rather than NTD-protective concentrations of folate. African American (AA) women and smokers were significantly less likely to achieve NTD-protective concentrations of RBC and plasma folate. A large majority of women reached NTD-protective concentrations of folate with the current level of FA fortification without using supplementary FA. Therefore, the remaining disparities in AA women and in smokers should be addressed by targeted individual improvements in folate intake.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Folic Acid , Logistic Models , Neural Tube , Neural Tube Defects , Plasma
2.
JCPSP-Journal of the College of Physicians and Surgeons Pakistan. 2012; 22 (9): 560-564
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-153030

ABSTRACT

To conduct a geographical analysis of biomedical publications from the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation [SAARC] countries over the past 25 years [1985-2009] using the PubMed database. A qualitative study. Web-based search during September 2010. A data extraction program, developed by one of the authors [SFS], was used to extract the raw publication counts from the downloaded PubMed data. A search of PubMed was performed for all journals indexed by selecting the advanced search option and entering the country name in the 'affiliation' field. The publications were normalized by total population, adult illiteracy rate, gross domestic product [GDP], secondary school enrollment ratio and Internet usage rate. The number of PubMed-listed papers published by the SAARC countries over the last 25 years axilla 141,783, which is 1.1% of the total papers indexed by PubMed in the same period. India alone produced 90.5% of total publications generated by SAARC countries. The average number of papers published per year from 1985 to 2009 was 5671 and number of publication increased approximately 242-fold. Normalizing by the population [per million] and GDP [per billion], India [133, 27.6%] and Nepal [323, 37.3%] had the highest publications respectively. There was a marked imbalance among the SAARC countries in terms of biomedical research and publication. Because of huge population and the high disease burden, biomedical research and publication output should receive special attention to formulate health policies, re-orient medical education curricula, and alleviate diseases and poverty

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