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Suggested Citation:"Appendix D: Acronyms and Abbreviations." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
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D
Acronyms and Abbreviations

ADI Acceptable Daily Intake

AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

AI Adequate Intake

AMD age-related macular degeneration

ASA24 automated self-administered 24-hour recall

BMI body mass index

BUI Beneficial Utility Index

CVD cardiovascular disease

DHA docosahexaenoic acid

DNA deoxyribonucleic acid

DRI Dietary Reference Intakes

DV Daily Value

EAR Estimated Average Requirement

EPA eicosapenataenoic acid

FDA Food and Drug Administration

FFQ food frequency questionnaire

IOM Institute of Medicine

LOAEL lowest-observed-adverse-effect level

Suggested Citation:"Appendix D: Acronyms and Abbreviations." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
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NCI National Cancer Institute

NFNAP National Food and Nutrient Analysis Program

NIH National Institutes of Health

NOAEL no-observed-adverse-effect level

PICO a mnemonic for the terms Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcome

RAE retinol activity equivalent

RDA Recommended Dietary Allowances

SNP single-nucleotide polymorphism

SR National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference

UL Tolerable Upper Intake Level

USDA U.S. Department of Agriculture

U.S. RDA U.S. Recommended Daily Allowances

WIC Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children

Suggested Citation:"Appendix D: Acronyms and Abbreviations." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
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Page 133
Suggested Citation:"Appendix D: Acronyms and Abbreviations." Institute of Medicine. 2007. Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/11940.
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Page 134
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 Nutritional Risk Assessment: Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges: Workshop Summary
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For more than two decades, the practice of risk assessment has been applied to human public health issues, and policy makers have used the results of risk assessments in their decision-making process. Approaches for risk assessment have been developed for nonnutrients such as drugs, food additives, and pesticides, but approaches for risk assessment have received less attention in the nutrition area. Some aspects of the risk assessment approach used for nonnutrients are applicable to the assessment of risks related to nutrition. The overall approach, however, must be adapted and modified to take into account the unique aspects of nutrients, including the fact that both high and low nutrient intakes are associated with risk. Experience with the application of a risk assessment process to the setting of upper levels of intake for essential nutrients, for example, has uncovered a number of challenges. Adapting and developing risk assessment strategies for application in nutrition science could lead to improved approaches to the development of dietary and nutritional recommendations and thus is a topic of considerable interest.

One nonscientific but overall challenge to nutritional risk assessment relates to increasing and improving communication among experts from key disciplines in ways that could inform the nutritional risk assessment process. Among these key disciplines are nutrition, toxicology, dietary exposure assessment, economics, risk analysis, and epidemiology. How can the perspectives and methods of these diverse fields be brought together to develop more effective approaches for quantitative nutritional risk assessment? How can they be applied to a spectrum of topics related to food and nutrition—micronutrients, macronutrients, dietary supplements, whole foods, food groups, and dietary patterns? How can they help overcome the data challenges that confront nutritional risk assessors?

As a step toward improving the communication and sharing methods and information across disciplines, members of the Interagency Risk Assessment Consortium, the U.S. Health and Human Services Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, the Institute of Medicine's Food Forum, and the International Life Sciences Institute planned the Nutritional Risk Assessment Workshop. The workshop was held on February 28 and March 1, 2007, in Washington, D.C. This workshop, which was envisioned as one in a series, focused on opening a dialogue to explore the unique questions and challenges faced by nutritionists and the potential use of risk assessment methodologies to answer them. Nutritional Risk Assessment : Perspectives, Methods, and Data Challenges, Workshop Summary summarizes the happenings of this workshop.

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