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Biomonitoring also gives us important
information about nutrition:
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the foods we eat and how
those foods affect our health.
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Remember the NHANES survey?
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In Section 2, we talked about
how biomonitoring scientists use
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the NHANES survey results
to gather exposure data,
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or information about the
levels of chemicals in people鈥檚 bodies.
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Scientists also use NHANES results
to gather data on nutritional biomarkers:
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the levels of certain
nutrients in our bodies.
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CDC publishes the findings in the
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National Report on Biochemical Indicators
of Diet and Nutrition in the U.S. Population.
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The first version of the
report was released in 2008,
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and it included 27 nutrition biomarkers.
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The second was published in 2012
and included 58 biomarkers.
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Updates to the 2012 version
occurred in 2020.
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Some of those biomarkers
include fat- and water-soluble vitamins,
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iron-status indicators, and iodine.
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This information helps doctors, scientists,
and public health officials find out
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if we鈥檙e getting too little or too
much of certain nutrients.
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Based on biomonitoring research,
public health officials make policy
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changes to help us get the
nutrition we need.
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For example, folic acid is a nutrient
that鈥檚 very important for
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pregnant women and infants.
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If pregnant women don鈥檛 get
enough folic acid in their diet,
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their babies are more likely to
develop a type of health problem
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called a neural tube defect.
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In 1998, the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration,
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or FDA, started requiring food
manufacturers to add folic acid
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to cereals and other grain-based foods 鈥�
a process called folic acid fortification.
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To see how effective
folic acid fortification was,
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biomonitoring scientists
developed a more accurate
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way to test blood folate levels,
or the amount of folic acid
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in a person鈥檚 blood.
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The test showed that blood
folate levels increased 50%
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among all race and ethnicity groups
after the new policy went into effect.
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However, 20% of women of childbearing age
still have less than the recommended
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amount of folate in their blood,
which means their future children
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could have a higher risk of
neural tube defects.
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To learn more about folic acid
and folate levels,
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see the National Report on Biochemical
Indicators of Diet and Nutrition
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in the U.S. Population.
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Here鈥檚 another example.
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You鈥檝e probably heard about
trans fatty acids (TFAs),
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often known as 鈥渢rans fats.鈥�
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Consuming too many TFAs
may put people at a higher
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risk of developing heart disease.
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In 2006, the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration, or FDA,
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started requiring food packaging to
include TFAs on the
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Nutrition Facts labels.
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Some state and local health
departments also took steps to help
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people eat less of these fats.
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They required restaurants to limit
their use of TFAs,
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and launched awareness
campaigns to teach people about
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the health risks associated with TFAs.
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But did all these changes lead
to people consuming less TFAs?
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Biomonitoring scientists turned to
the NHANES survey data to find out.
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Scientists at the
Environmental Health Laboratory
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used data from the 1999鈥�2000
and 2009鈥�2010 NHANES
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surveys to compare TFA
levels in adult Americans鈥� blood.
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The results showed that TFA levels
dropped by 54%,
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meaning that people consumed a
lot fewer TFAs after the national
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and state policies went
into effect in 2006.