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Dive into the research topics where Natalie Colabianchi is active.

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Featured researches published by Natalie Colabianchi.


American Journal of Epidemiology | 2010

Validation of 3 Food Outlet Databases: Completeness and Geospatial Accuracy in Rural and Urban Food Environments

Angela D. Liese; Natalie Colabianchi; Archana P. Lamichhane; Timothy L. Barnes; James Hibbert; Dwayne E. Porter; Michele Nichols; Andrew B. Lawson

Despite interest in the built food environment, little is known about the validity of commonly used secondary data. The authors conducted a comprehensive field census identifying the locations of all food outlets using a handheld global positioning system in 8 counties in South Carolina (2008–2009). Secondary data were obtained from 2 commercial companies, Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. (D&B) (Short Hills, New Jersey) and InfoUSA, Inc. (Omaha, Nebraska), and the South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control (DHEC). Sensitivity, positive predictive value, and geospatial accuracy were compared. The field census identified 2,208 food outlets, significantly more than the DHEC (n = 1,694), InfoUSA (n = 1,657), or D&B (n = 1,573). Sensitivities were moderate for DHEC (68%) and InfoUSA (65%) and fair for D&B (55%). Combining InfoUSA and D&B data would have increased sensitivity to 78%. Positive predictive values were very good for DHEC (89%) and InfoUSA (86%) and good for D&B (78%). Geospatial accuracy varied, depending on the scale: More than 80% of outlets were geocoded to the correct US Census tract, but only 29%–39% were correctly allocated within 100 m. This study suggests that the validity of common data sources used to characterize the food environment is limited. The marked undercount of food outlets and the geospatial inaccuracies observed have the potential to introduce bias into studies evaluating the impact of the built food environment.


Health Expectations | 2000

Doctor‐patient communication patterns in breast cancer adjuvant therapy discussions

Laura A. Siminoff; Peter M. Ravdin; Natalie Colabianchi; Christina M. Saunders Sturm

Objective To identify variables within the patient‐oncologist communication pattern that impact overall patient comprehension and satisfaction within the breast cancer adjuvant therapy (AT) setting.


Obesity Reviews | 2013

Factors associated with development of excessive fatness in children and adolescents: a review of prospective studies

Russell R. Pate; J. R. O'Neill; Angela D. Liese; K. F. Janz; E. M. Granberg; Natalie Colabianchi; D. W. Harsha; M. M. Condrasky; P. M. O'Neil; E. Y. Lau; S.E. Taverno Ross

The purpose of this review was to examine the factors that predict the development of excessive fatness in children and adolescents. Medline, Web of Science and PubMed were searched to identify prospective cohort studies that evaluated the association between several variables (e.g. physical activity, sedentary behaviour, dietary intake and genetic, physiological, social cognitive, family and peer, school and community factors) and the development of excessive fatness in children and adolescents (5–18 years). Sixty‐one studies met the eligibility criteria and were included. There is evidence to support the association between genetic factors and low physical activity with excessive fatness in children and adolescents. Current studies yielded mixed evidence for the contribution of sedentary behaviour, dietary intake, physiological biomarkers, family factors and the community physical activity environment. No conclusions could be drawn about social cognitive factors, peer factors, school nutrition and physical activity environments, and the community nutrition environment. There is a dearth of longitudinal evidence that examines specific factors contributing to the development of excessive fatness in childhood and adolescence. Given that childhood obesity is a worldwide public health concern, the field can benefit from large‐scale, long‐term prospective studies that use state‐of‐the‐art measures in a diverse sample of children and adolescents.


Stroke | 2008

Cardiorespiratory Fitness as a Predictor of Fatal and Nonfatal Stroke in Asymptomatic Women and Men

Steven P. Hooker; Xuemei Sui; Natalie Colabianchi; John E. Vena; James N. Laditka; Michael J. LaMonte; Steven N. Blair

Background and Purpose— Prospective data on the association between cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and stroke are largely limited to studies in men or do not separately examine risks for fatal and nonfatal stroke. This study examined the association between CRF and fatal and nonfatal stroke in a large cohort of asymptomatic women and men. Methods— A total of 46 405 men and 15 282 women without known myocardial infarction or stroke at baseline completed a maximal treadmill exercise test between 1970 and 2001. CRF was grouped as quartiles of the sex-specific distribution of maximal metabolic equivalents achieved. Mortality follow-up was through December 31, 2003, using the National Death Index. Nonfatal stroke, defined as physician-diagnosed stroke, was ascertained from surveys during 1982 to 2004. Cox regression models quantified the pattern and magnitude of association between CRF and stroke. Results— There were 692 strokes during 813 944 man-years of exposure and 171 strokes during 248 902 woman-years of exposure. Significant inverse associations between CRF and age-adjusted fatal, nonfatal, and total stroke rates were observed for women and men (Ptrend≤0.05 each). After adjusting for several cardiovascular disease risk factors, the inverse association between CRF and each stroke outcome remained significant (Ptrend<0.05 each) in men. In women, the multivariable-adjusted relationship between CRF and nonfatal and total stroke remained significant (Ptrend≤0.01 each), but not between CRF and fatal stroke (Ptrend=0.18). A CRF threshold of 7 to 8 maximal metabolic equivalents was associated with a substantially reduced rate of total stroke in both men and women. Conclusions— These findings suggest that CRF is an independent determinant of stroke incidence in initially asymptomatic and cardiovascular disease-free adults, and the strength and pattern of the association is similar for men and women.


Preventive Medicine | 2009

Utilization and physical activity levels at renovated and unrenovated school playgrounds

Natalie Colabianchi; Audrey E. Kinsella; Claudia J. Coulton; Shirley M. Moore

OBJECTIVE This study examined utilization and physical activity levels at renovated compared to unrenovated school playgrounds. METHODS Ten unrenovated and ten renovated school playgrounds (renovated at least a year prior) in Cleveland, OH were matched on school and neighborhood characteristics. Using direct observation (SOPLAY), the number of persons attending each playground and their physical activity levels were recorded using separate counts for girls, boys, men and women. Each school was observed ten times for 90 min each time outside of school hours in 2005. Paired t-tests, Wilcoxon Signed Ranks tests, and regression analyses were completed to examine differences across school pairs. RESULTS More persons overall including adults and children utilized the renovated playgrounds compared to the unrenovated playgrounds. The proportion moderately-to-vigorously active was not different between renovated and unrenovated playgrounds although the proportion of children, in particular boys, who were vigorously active was greater at the renovated playgrounds. Although utilization was higher at the renovated playgrounds, absolute utilization was low across all playgrounds. CONCLUSIONS This study suggests that playgrounds renovations may have the potential to increase the number of children utilizing the playground outside of school hours and may increase the proportion of children, especially boys, who are vigorously active.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2012

Cardiorespiratory Fitness as a Predictor of Dementia Mortality in Men and Women

Rui Liu; Xuemei Sui; James N. Laditka; Timothy S. Church; Natalie Colabianchi; James R. Hussey; Steven N. Blair

UNLABELLED There is evidence that physical activity may reduce the risk of developing Alzheimer disease and dementia. However, few reports have examined the physical activity-dementia association with objective measures of physical activity. Cardiorespiratory fitness (hereafter called fitness) is an objective reproducible measure of recent physical activity habits. PURPOSE We sought to determine whether fitness is associated with lower risk for dementia mortality in women and men. METHODS We followed 14,811 women and 45,078 men, age 20-88 yr at baseline, for an average of 17 yr. All participants completed a preventive health examination at the Cooper Clinic in Dallas, TX, during 1970-2001. Fitness was measured with a maximal treadmill exercise test, with results expressed in maximal METs. The National Death Index identified deaths through 2003. Cox proportional hazards models were used to examine the association between baseline fitness and dementia mortality, adjusting for age, sex, examination year, body mass index, smoking, alcohol use, abnormal ECGs, and health status. RESULTS There were 164 deaths with dementia listed as the cause during 1,012,125 person-years of exposure. Each 1-MET increase in fitness was associated with a 14% lower adjusted risk of dementia mortality (95% confidence interval (CI) = 6%-22%). With fitness expressed in tertiles, adjusted hazard ratios (HRs) for those in the middle- and high-fitness groups suggest their risk of dementia mortality was less than half that of those in the lowest fitness group (HR = 0.44, CI = 0.26-0.74 and HR = 0.49, CI = 0.26-0.90, respectively). CONCLUSIONS Greater fitness was associated with lower risk of mortality from dementia in a large cohort of men and women.


Laryngoscope | 2005

Is GERD a risk factor for laryngeal cancer

Mohammed A. Qadeer; Natalie Colabianchi; Michael F. Vaezi

Objective/Hypothesis: The significance of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) in laryngeal cancer is controversial due to disparate studies. To evaluate the overall strength of the association of GERD with laryngeal cancer, we performed meta‐analysis of the original studies in literature.


International Journal of Behavioral Nutrition and Physical Activity | 2011

Features and amenities of school playgrounds: A direct observation study of utilization and physical activity levels outside of school time

Natalie Colabianchi; Andréa L. Maslow; Kamala Swayampakala

BackgroundA significant amount of research has examined whether park or playground availability is associated with physical activity. However, little research has examined whether specific features or amenities of parks or playgrounds, such as the number of unique types of playground equipment or the safety of the equipment is associated with utilization of the facility or physical activity levels while at the facility. There are no studies that use direct observation and a detailed park assessment to examine these associations.MethodsTwenty urban schoolyards in the Midwest, ten of which were renovated, were included in this study. Using a detailed environmental assessment tool (i.e., Environmental Assessment of Public Recreation Spaces), information on a variety of playground attributes was collected. Using direct observation (i.e., System for Observing Play and Leisure Activity in Youth), the number of adults, girls and boys attending each schoolyard and their physical activity levels were recorded. Each schoolyard was observed ten times for 90 minutes each time outside of school hours. Clustered multivariable negative binomial regressions and linear regressions were completed to examine the association between playground attributes and utilization of the schoolyard and the proportion active on the playground, respectively. Effect modification by renovation status was also examined.ResultsAt renovated schoolyards, the total number of play features was significantly associated with greater utilization in adults and girls; overall cleanliness was significantly associated with less utilization in girls and boys; and coverage/shade for resting features was significantly associated with greater utilization in adults and boys. At unrenovated schoolyards, overall safety was significantly associated with greater utilization in boys. No playground attribute was associated with the proportion active on the playground after adjusting for all other significant playground attributes.ConclusionsHaving a large quantity of play features and shade at renovated playgrounds were positively associated with utilization of the schoolyard. Modifying playgrounds to have these features may increase the utilization of these facilities outside of school time. Additional research should explore what features and amenities are associated with increased physical activity levels of children and adults who utilize the facilities.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2010

Muscular Strength and Incident Hypertension in Normotensive and Prehypertensive Men

Andréa L. Maslow; Xuemei Sui; Natalie Colabianchi; James R. Hussey; Steven N. Blair

UNLABELLED The protective effects of cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) on hypertension (HTN) are well known; however, the association between muscular strength and incidence of HTN has yet to be examined. PURPOSE This study evaluated the strength-HTN association with and without accounting for CRF. METHODS Participants were 4147 men (age = 20-82 yr) in the Aerobics Center Longitudinal Study for whom an age-specific composite muscular strength score was computed from measures of a one-repetition maximal leg and a one-repetition maximal bench press. CRF was quantified by maximal treadmill exercise test time in minutes. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis was used to estimate hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals of incident HTN events according to exposure categories. RESULTS During a mean follow-up of 19 yr, there were 503 incident HTN cases. Multivariable-adjusted (excluding CRF) HR of HTN in normotensive men comparing middle- and high-strength thirds to the lowest third were not significant at 1.17 and 0.84, respectively. Multivariable-adjusted (excluding CRF) HR of HTN in baseline prehypertensive men comparing middle- and high-strength thirds to the lowest third were significant at 0.73 and 0.72 (P = 0.01 each), respectively. The association between muscular strength and incidence of HTN in baseline prehypertensive men was no longer significant after control for CRF (P = 0.26). CONCLUSIONS The study indicated that middle and high levels of muscular strength were associated with a reduced risk of HTN in prehypertensive men only. However, this relationship was no longer significant after controlling for CRF.


Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2013

Characterizing the food retail environment: Impact of count, type, and geospatial error in 2 secondary data sources

Angela D. Liese; Timothy L. Barnes; Archana P. Lamichhane; James Hibbert; Natalie Colabianchi; Andrew B. Lawson

OBJECTIVE Commercial listings of food retail outlets are increasingly used by community members and food policy councils and in multilevel intervention research to identify areas with limited access to healthier food. This study quantified the amount of count, type, and geospatial error in 2 commercial data sources. METHODS InfoUSA and Dun and Bradstreet were compared with a validated field census and validity statistics were calculated. RESULTS Considering only completeness, Dun and Bradstreet data undercounted 24% of existing supermarkets and grocery stores, and InfoUSA, 29%. In addition, considering accuracy of outlet type assignment increased the undercount error to 42% and 39%, respectively. Marked overcount existed as well, and only 43% of existing supermarkets were correctly identified with respect to presence, outlet type, and location. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS Relying exclusively on secondary data to characterize the food environment will result in substantial error. Whereas extensive data cleaning can offset some error, verification of outlets with a field census is still the method of choice.

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Steven N. Blair

University of South Carolina

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Angela D. Liese

University of South Carolina

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Virginia J. Howard

University of Alabama at Birmingham

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Brent Hutto

University of South Carolina

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John E. Vena

Medical University of South Carolina

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Russell R. Pate

University of South Carolina

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Darcy A. Freedman

University of South Carolina

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Dwayne E. Porter

University of South Carolina

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James Hibbert

University of South Carolina

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