Skip to main navigation
Skip to search
Skip to main content
University of Copenhagen Research Portal Home
Help & FAQ
Dansk
English
Home
Profiles
Research output
Research units
Press/Media
Activities
Prizes
???studenttheses???
Datasets
Search by expertise, name or affiliation
Does a population-based multi-factorial lifestyle intervention increase social inequality in dietary habits? The Inter99 study
Ulla Toft, Iris Marie Jakobsen,
Mette Aadahl
, Charlotta Pisinger, Torben Jørgensen
Department of Clinical Medicine
Department of Public Health
8
Citations (Scopus)
Overview
Fingerprint
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'Does a population-based multi-factorial lifestyle intervention increase social inequality in dietary habits? The Inter99 study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
Sort by
Weight
Alphabetically
Keyphrases
Dietary Habits
100%
Lifestyle Intervention
100%
Population-based
100%
Social Inequality
100%
Inter99
100%
Socioeconomic Position
50%
Fish Intake
25%
Food Frequency Questionnaire
25%
Education Status
25%
Unemployed Women
25%
Net Change
25%
Socioeconomic Groups
25%
Fruit Intake
25%
Employment Status
25%
Fat Intake
25%
Socioeconomic Health Disparities
25%
Dietary Intake
25%
Regression Analysis
25%
Dietary Intervention
25%
Vegetable Intake
25%
Confidence Interval
25%
Interaction Terms
25%
Intervention Studies
25%
Intervention Effect
25%
Unhealthy Dietary Habits
25%
Denmark
25%
Employed Women
25%
Copenhagen
25%
Intervention Group
25%
Food Science
Dietary Habit
100%
Fat Intake
20%
Food Frequency Questionnaire
20%
Fruit Intake
20%
Vegetable Intake
20%
Dietary Intake
20%