S. Aguilar
Utah State University
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by S. Aguilar.
Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2013
Heidi Wengreen; Gregory J. Madden; S. Aguilar; Rochelle R. Smits; Brooke A. Jones
OBJECTIVE Preliminary evaluation in the United States (US) of a school-based fruit and vegetable (F/V) intervention, known as the Food Dudes (FD) program, developed in the United Kingdom. METHODS Over 16 days (Phase 1), elementary-school children (n = 253) watched short videos featuring heroic peers (the FD) eating F/V and received a reward for eating F/V served at lunchtime. In the 3 months that followed (Phase 2), children received increasingly intermittent rewards for eating F/V. Consumption was measured by photo analysis and assessment of skin carotenoids. RESULTS Fruit and vegetable intake increased significantly after Phases 1 and 2 (P < .001 for both). This effect was most discriminable among children who consumed no fruit (n = 100) or no vegetables (n = 119) at pre-intervention baseline. Among these children, F/V intake (combined) increased by 0.49 (0.53) cups per day. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS The FD program can increase F/V intake in US elementary schools.
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2010
Heidi Wengreen; S. Aguilar; Michael Lefevre
BACKGROUND Studies of adult subjects have found a strong correlation between serum carotenoids and skin carotenoids measured by resonance Raman spectroscopy (RRS). No published studies have examined correlations between skin and serum carotenoids among children. OBJECTIVES We aimed to validate skin RRS methodology against serum carotenoid measurements by high-performance liquid chromatography and to determine whether RRS can be used as a valid biomarker of fruit and vegetable (F/V) intake among children. DESIGN In our cross-sectional study, participants were 45 healthy children aged 5 to 17 years who provided three blood samples used to assess serum carotenoid concentrations and three RRS skin measurements of the palm within a 4-week period. Dietary intake of F/V was assessed three times within 4 weeks using a 27-item food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) and an automated multiple-pass 24-hour daily recall. Estimates of intake from three FFQs, completed at least 7 days apart, were averaged. Estimates of intake from 24-hour daily recalls were collected on 2 weekdays and 1 weekend day and averaged. RESULTS Levels of skin and serum carotenoids were highly correlated (R(2)=0.62; P<0.001). A linear regression model, controlling for childs weight and scanner unit, predicted that for every unit increase of total F/V from FFQ and total F/V as assessed by 24-hour daily recall, RRS intensity was predicted to increase by 3,798 (P=0.001) and 3,504 (P=0.001), respectively. Similar results were observed for reported high-carotenoid vegetable intake. Total carotenoid and beta carotene levels from 24-hour daily recalls correlated to total serum carotenoids levels (P<0.01 and P<0.05, respectively). Total carotenoid, alpha carotene, and beta carotene levels from the 24-hour daily recalls correlated to RRS (P<0.01). CONCLUSIONS Skin carotenoids measured by RRS were strongly correlated with serum carotenoid levels and were positively associated with estimates of intake from FFQ and an automated multiple-pass 24-hour daily recall among children aged 5 to 17 years. Skin carotenoids may be used as valid biomarker of F/V intake among children.
PLOS ONE | 2014
Brooke A. Jones; Gregory J. Madden; Heidi Wengreen; S. Aguilar; E. Anne Desjardins
Despite the known health benefits of doing so, most US children do not consume enough fruits and vegetables (FV). School-based interventions can be effective in increasing FV consumption, but the most effective of these require that schools allocate their time, effort, and financial resources to implementing the program: expenditures that schools may be reluctant to provide in climates of academic accountability and economic austerity. The present demonstration project used a behaviorally based gamification approach to develop an intervention designed to increase FV consumption while minimizing material and labor costs to the school. During the intervention, the school (N = 180 students in grades K-8) played a cooperative game in which school-level goals were met by consuming higher-than-normal amounts of either fruit or vegetables (alternating-treatments experimental design). School-level consumption was quantified using a weight-based waste measure in the cafeteria. Over a period of 13 school days, fruit consumption increased by 66% and vegetable consumption by 44% above baseline levels. Use of an alternating-treatment time-series design with differential levels of FV consumption on days when fruit or vegetable was targeted for improvement supported the role of the intervention in these overall consumption increases. In post-intervention surveys, teachers rated the intervention as practical in the classroom and enjoyed by their students. Parent surveys revealed that children were more willing to try new FV at home and increased their consumption of FV following the intervention. These findings suggest that a behaviorally based gamification approach may prove practically useful in addressing concerns about poor dietary decision-making by children in schools.
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2015
S. Aguilar; Heidi Wengreen; Jeffrey Dew
BACKGROUND Previous studies have shown an increase in serum carotenoid status among children when fed carotenoids. This study looked at the effect and dose-response of a known amount of carotenoid consumption on change in skin carotenoid status among children. METHODS Participants were children aged 5 to 17 years from Cache County, UT (n=58). Children were randomly assigned to one of three groups: high (n=18) or low (n=18) dose of a carotenoid-rich juice (2.75 mg carotenoids/30 mL juice), or placebo juice (n=22). Children were asked to drink an assigned dose of the juice (30 to 120 mL/day) based on the weight of the child and group assignment, every day for 8 weeks. Skin carotenoids were measured every 2 weeks by resonance Raman spectroscopy. Participants were asked to maintain their usual diet throughout the study. Usual diet was assessed using three averaged 24-hour recalls; diet constancy was measured using food frequency questionnaires administered at baseline, Week 4, and Week 8. Repeated measures analysis of variance was used to assess the group differences in skin carotenoid status over time. RESULTS The high-dose and low-dose groups had mean±standard deviation increases in skin carotenoid status of 11,515±1,134 and 10,009±1,439 Raman intensity counts, respectively (both P values <0.001, for change in means compared with baseline) at Week 8, although they showed significant change from baseline by Week 2. The placebo groups change of 985 Raman intensity counts was not statistically significant. The difference in change between the 2 experimental groups was not significant at Week 2, 4, 6, or 8. CONCLUSIONS Consumption of 30 to 120 mL (2.75 to 11 mg carotenoids) of a carotenoid-rich juice significantly increased skin carotenoid status over an 8-week period among children aged 5 to 17 years. The amount of carotenoids found in this amount of juice is equal to the amount found in approximately 23 to 92 g cooked carrots per day.
Alzheimer's & Dementia: Translational Research & Clinical Interventions | 2015
Maria C. Norton; Christine Clark; Jo Ann T. Tschanz; Phillip J. Hartin; Elizabeth B. Fauth; Julie Gast; Travis E. Dorsch; Heidi Wengreen; Chris D. Nugent; W. David Robinson; Michael Lefevre; Sally I. McClean; Ian Cleland; Sydney Y. Schaefer; S. Aguilar
Most Alzheimers disease (AD) prevention studies focus on older adults or persons with existing cognitive impairment. This study describes the design and progress of a novel pilot intervention, the Gray Matters study.
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2016
Brooke A. Morrill; Gregory J. Madden; Heidi Wengreen; Jamison D. Fargo; S. Aguilar
Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2014
Heidi Wengreen; S. Aguilar; Gregory J. Madden; Brooke A. Jones
Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2013
Heidi Wengreen; S. Aguilar; Gregory J. Madden
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2018
Heidi Wengreen; D. Joyner; S. Aguilar; Gregory J. Madden; H. Obray
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics | 2017
Heidi Wengreen; N. Norris; J. Day; J. Hansen; S. Aguilar