The goal of this training program is to encourage independent research careers that contribute to prevention of cardiovascular disease through application of knowledge of nutrition using behavior science, health education, and related scholarly approaches. This is an application for a fourth five-year award to support four postdoctoral trainees integrating the broad areas of nutrition, behavioral science, and prevention of cardiovascular disease. Trainees will be recruited from medicine, nutrition, psychology, and other social and behavioral sciences, nursing, health education, exercise physiology, and other areas that pertain to the broad domain the research encompasses. Training resources include the Center for Health Behavior Research, the Lipid Research Center, the Section of Applied Physiology within the Department of Medicine, the Division of Cardiology, the General Clinical Research Center, the Division of General Medical Sciences, the Diabetes Research and Training Center, the Behavioral Medicine Center within the Department of Psychiatry, and the Department of Psychology. An emphasis of the training program has been on broad, interdisciplinary research. Past trainee projects have ranged across community health promotion, psychology and behavioral science, lipid metabolism, exercise physiology, pediatric preventive medicine, diabetes, cardiovascular reactivity, and developmental aspects of neuroregulation of cardiovascular response. This training program has been highly successful in terms of: 1) the research career paths of trainees (all 15 former trainees have remained in academic research positions, 3 have been promoted to professor, and 6 have been granted tenure); 2) their scholarly productivity (an average of 2.52 publications per year since completing training; and 3) their success in securing independent funding (4 are currently PIs of NIH-sponsored grants, 3 are currently project directors of NIH-sponsored multi-project grants, 2 applied for and were awarded independent T32 fellowships, and 12 of the 15 who have completed their time supported by the training program have secured some type of independent funding for their research). The program has been successful in achieving its goal of encouraging research careers in the application of nutritional and behavioral science to prevention of cardiovascular disease.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Institutional National Research Service Award (T32)
Project #
5T32HL007456-18
Application #
2857626
Study Section
Research Training Review Committee (RTR)
Project Start
1980-07-01
Project End
2002-06-30
Budget Start
1999-07-01
Budget End
2000-06-30
Support Year
18
Fiscal Year
1999
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Washington University
Department
Internal Medicine/Medicine
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
062761671
City
Saint Louis
State
MO
Country
United States
Zip Code
63130
Balantekin, Katherine N; Birch, Leann L; Savage, Jennifer S (2018) Family, friend, and media factors are associated with patterns of weight-control behavior among adolescent girls. Eat Weight Disord 23:215-223
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Balantekin, Katherine N; Hohman, Emily E; Adams, Elizabeth L et al. (2018) More rapid increase in BMI from age 5-15 is associated with elevated weight status at age 24 among non-Hispanic white females. Eat Behav 31:12-17
Hayes, Jacqueline F; Balantekin, Katherine N; Altman, Myra et al. (2018) Sleep Patterns and Quality Are Associated with Severity of Obesity and Weight-Related Behaviors in Adolescents with Overweight and Obesity. Child Obes 14:11-17
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Goel, Neha J; Sadeh-Sharvit, Shiri; Flatt, Rachael E et al. (2018) Correlates of suicidal ideation in college women with eating disorders. Int J Eat Disord 51:579-584
Lipson, Sarah Ketchen; Jones, J Megan; Taylor, C Barr et al. (2017) Understanding and promoting treatment-seeking for eating disorders and body image concerns on college campuses through online screening, prevention and intervention. Eat Behav 25:68-73
Fitzsimmons-Craft, Ellen E; Eichen, Dawn M; Kass, Andrea E et al. (2017) Reciprocal longitudinal relations between weight/shape concern and comorbid pathology among women at very high risk for eating disorder onset. Eat Weight Disord :

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