Alice Jo Rainville
RMIT University
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Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2011
Bonnie Farmer; Brian T. Larson; Victor L. Fulgoni; Alice Jo Rainville; George U. Liepa
BACKGROUNDnPopulation-based studies have shown that vegetarians have lower body mass index than nonvegetarians, suggesting that vegetarian diet plans may be an approach for weight management. However, a perception exists that vegetarian diets are deficient in certain nutrients.nnnOBJECTIVEnTo compare dietary quality of vegetarians, nonvegetarians, and dieters, and to test the hypothesis that a vegetarian diet would not compromise nutrient intake when used to manage body weight.nnnDESIGNnCross-sectional analysis of National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (1999-2004) dietary and anthropometric data. Diet quality was determined using United States Department of Agricultures Healthy Eating Index 2005. Participants included adults aged 19 years and older, excluding pregnant and lactating women (N = 13,292). Lacto-ovo vegetarian diets were portrayed by intakes of participants who did not eat meat, poultry, or fish on the day of the survey (n = 851). Weight-loss diets were portrayed by intakes of participants who consumed 500 kcal less than their estimated energy requirements (n = 4,635). Mean nutrient intakes and body mass indexes were adjusted for energy, sex, and ethnicity. Using analysis of variance, all vegetarians were compared to all nonvegetarians, dieting vegetarians to dieting nonvegetarians, and nondieting vegetarians to nondieting nonvegetarians.nnnRESULTSnMean intakes of fiber, vitamins A, C, and E, thiamin, riboflavin, folate, calcium, magnesium, and iron were higher for all vegetarians than for all nonvegetarians. Although vegetarian intakes of vitamin E, vitamin A, and magnesium exceeded that of nonvegetarians (8.3 ± 0.3 vs 7.0 ± 0.1 mg; 718 ± 28 vs 603 ± 10 μg; 322 ± 5 vs 281 ± 2 mg), both groups had intakes that were less than desired. The Healthy Eating Index score did not differ for all vegetarians compared to all nonvegetarians (50.5 ± 0.88 vs 50.1 ± 0.33, P = 0.6).nnnCONCLUSIONSnThese findings suggest that vegetarian diets are nutrient dense, consistent with dietary guidelines, and could be recommended for weight management without compromising diet quality.
The Journal of Child Nutrition & Management | 2009
Alice Jo Rainville; Kristi L. Lofton; Deborah H. Carr
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2005
Alice Jo Rainville; Beverly L. Girard
The Journal of Child Nutrition & Management | 2010
Alice Jo Rainville; Kyunghee Choi; Mark Ragg; Amber D. King; Deborah H. Carr
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2005
Michelle Walters; Alice Jo Rainville
The Journal of Child Nutrition & Management | 2016
Sarah Minaya; Alice Jo Rainville
The Journal of Child Nutrition & Management | 2013
Alice Jo Rainville; Amber D. King; Mary Frances Nettles
JAMA Pediatrics | 2011
Alice Jo Rainville
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2010
K.P. Choi; T.J. Murray; D.F. Reynolds; Alice Jo Rainville
Journal of The American Dietetic Association | 2009
Dee Murphy; Judith Brooks; Alice Jo Rainville