Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.104051
Title: Cohort profile: the Diet and Healthy Aging (DaHA) study in Singapore
Authors: Yu, Rongjun 
Sun, Ye
Ye, Kaisy Xinhong
Feng, Qiushi 
Lim, Su Lin
Mahendran, Rathi 
Cheah, Irwin Kee-Mun 
Foo, Roger Sik Yin 
Chua, Ru Yuan 
Gwee, Xinyi 
Loh, Marie
Sarmugam, Rani
Khine, Wei Wei Thwe 
Chao, Yin Xia
Larbi, Anis 
Lee, Yuan Kun 
Kumar, Alan Prem 
Kennedy, Brian K 
Kua, Ee Heok 
Feng, Lei 
Keywords: Science & Technology
Life Sciences & Biomedicine
Cell Biology
Geriatrics & Gerontology
cognitive impairment
DaHA
diet
cohort profile
healthy ageing
COGNITIVE DECLINE
DEMENTIA
RISK
PATTERNS
ASSOCIATION
CONSUMPTION
PREVALENCE
VALIDATION
LONGEVITY
GENOTYPE
Issue Date: 15-Dec-2020
Publisher: IMPACT JOURNALS LLC
Citation: Yu, Rongjun, Sun, Ye, Ye, Kaisy Xinhong, Feng, Qiushi, Lim, Su Lin, Mahendran, Rathi, Cheah, Irwin Kee-Mun, Foo, Roger Sik Yin, Chua, Ru Yuan, Gwee, Xinyi, Loh, Marie, Sarmugam, Rani, Khine, Wei Wei Thwe, Chao, Yin Xia, Larbi, Anis, Lee, Yuan Kun, Kumar, Alan Prem, Kennedy, Brian K, Kua, Ee Heok, Feng, Lei (2020-12-15). Cohort profile: the Diet and Healthy Aging (DaHA) study in Singapore. AGING-US 12 (23) : 23889-23899. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.18632/aging.104051
Abstract: How diet is related with cognition and health has not been systematically examined in Asians whose eating habits are very different from their counterparts in the West and the biological mechanisms underlying such links are not well known yet. The diet and healthy aging (DaHA) study is a community-based longitudinal study conducted to examine the role of diet and nutrition in promoting cognitive, emotional, and physical health among community-living elderly Singaporeans. The first wave of DaHA, conducted from 2011 to 2017, provided detailed information on diet and baseline cognitive function and health from 1010 community-living elderly in Singapore. Biomarkers of oxidative stress, systemic inflammation, and genetic information were collected. The ongoing second wave of DaHA is conducted from 2017 to 2020, which provides follow- up assessments using established cognitive tests and clinical tools. This well-characterized cohort, with its archived biological samples and high-quality data on diet and lifestyle factors will allow researchers to explore the relationships among diet, nutrition, genes, cognition, mental and physical health in an extremely cost-effective manner. Translations of the research findings into clinical and public health practices will potentially help to promote cognitive health at the population level and reduce healthcare costs related to cognitive impairment.
Source Title: AGING-US
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/218882
ISSN: 19454589
DOI: 10.18632/aging.104051
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