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Anthony J. G. Hanley

Researcher at Mount Sinai Hospital

Publications -  12
Citations -  985

Anthony J. G. Hanley is an academic researcher from Mount Sinai Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Type 2 diabetes. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 12 publications receiving 964 citations. Previous affiliations of Anthony J. G. Hanley include St. Michael's Hospital.

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Specific Patterns of Food Consumption and Preparation Are Associated with Diabetes and Obesity in a Native Canadian Community

TL;DR: The relationship between usual patterns of food intake, fattiness of food preparation and consumption, and diabetes and obesity status in a Native Canadian reserve in northwestern Ontario and a community-based diabetes prevention program in the community was examined.
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A Pilot School-Based Healthy Eating and Physical Activity Intervention Improves Diet, Food Knowledge, and Self-Efficacy for Native Canadian Children

TL;DR: This program was associated with improved knowledge and the psychosocial factors related to healthy eating and dietary fiber intake of students in a remote First Nations community and exposure to the intervention was not associated with dietary intent or the percentage of energy from dietary fat.
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Nontraditional cardiovascular risk factors in pediatric metabolic syndrome.

TL;DR: Nontraditional CV risk factors accompany the accrual of traditional risk factors early in the progression to pediatric metabolic syndrome, and inclusion of these factors in factor analysis suggests that 5 core traits underlie the early development of an enhanced CV risk factor profile in Native children.
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Physical activity, anthropometric factors and risk of pancreatic cancer: results from the Canadian enhanced cancer surveillance system.

TL;DR: The hypothesis that insulin resistance is an etiologic factor in the development of pancreatic neoplasms among men and possibly women is supported and physical activity did not appear to be associated with pancreatic cancer among women.
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Body Image Concepts Differ by Age and Sex in an Ojibway-Cree Community in Canada

TL;DR: Differences between results and those reported for Anglo populations indicate that while both groups prefer body shapes smaller than those they have currently, the Ojibway-Cree tend to prefer relatively larger body shapes.