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Jessie X. Fan

Researcher at University of Utah

Publications -  72
Citations -  2750

Jessie X. Fan is an academic researcher from University of Utah. The author has contributed to research in topics: Consumer Expenditure Survey & National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 70 publications receiving 2430 citations.

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Mixed land use and walkability: Variations in land use measures and relationships with BMI, overweight, and obesity.

TL;DR: Generalized estimating equations, conducted on 5000 randomly chosen licensed drivers aged 25-64 in Salt Lake County, Utah, relate lower BMIs to older neighborhoods, components of a 6-category land use entropy score, and nearby light rail stops to healthy weight.
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Consumer Decision‐Making Styles of Young‐Adult Chinese

TL;DR: In this paper, the dimensions and profiles of consumer decision-making styles of young-adult Chinese are investigated using a modified model of consumer decisions and data collected from five Chinese universities and compared with those of similar studies using American and Korean data.
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Walkability and body mass index density, design, and new diversity measures.

TL;DR: Walkability indicators, particularly the two land-use diversity measures, are important predictors of body weight and should be considered as a source of data for community studies of BMI.
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Running to the Store? The relationship between neighborhood environments and the risk of obesity ☆

TL;DR: A strong association is found between neighborhood retail food options and BMI/obesity risk with the magnitude of the effects varying by neighborhood income, and multiple food options within a neighborhood reduce BMI/OBesity risk, relative to no food options, for individuals living in either low-income or non-low neighborhoods.
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Rural-urban differences in objective and subjective measures of physical activity: findings from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2003-2006.

TL;DR: The direction and significance of rural–urban difference in physical activity varied by the method of physical activity measurement, likely related to rural residents spending more time in low-intensity household physical activity but less time in high-intensity physical activity.