Estimates of fish consumption rates for consumers of bought and self-caught fish in Connecticut, Florida, Minnesota, and North Dakota

Moya, J; Itkin, C; Selevan, SG; Rogers, JW; Clickner, RP

HERO ID

1060506

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2008

Language

English

PMID

18579180

HERO ID 1060506
In Press No
Year 2008
Title Estimates of fish consumption rates for consumers of bought and self-caught fish in Connecticut, Florida, Minnesota, and North Dakota
Authors Moya, J; Itkin, C; Selevan, SG; Rogers, JW; Clickner, RP
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Volume 403
Issue 1-3
Page Numbers 89-98
Abstract Fish consumption rates derived from national surveys may not accurately reflect consumption rates in a particular population such as recreational anglers. Many state and local health agencies in the U.S. have conducted area-specific surveys to study fish consumption patterns in local populations, assess exposure to environmental contaminants, or evaluate compliance with fish advisories. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has analyzed the raw data from fish consumption surveys in Florida, Connecticut, Minnesota, and North Dakota for the purpose of deriving distributions of fish consumption rates and studying the variables that may be more predictive of high-end consumers. Distributions of fish consumption for different age cohorts, ethnic groups, socioeconomic statuses, types of fish (i.e., freshwater, marine, estuarine), and source of fish (i.e., store-bought versus self-caught) were derived. Consumption of fish and shellfish for those who consume both caught and bought fish is higher than those who reported eating only bought or only self-caught. Mean fish consumption per kilogram of body weight ranged from 0.11 g/kg-day to 2.3 g/kg-day. The highest values were observed in Florida for children 1<6 years of age. The Florida data show a statistically significant increase in the percentage of the population reporting fish and shellfish consumption with an increase in household income and education. This trend was not observed in the other states.
Doi 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2008.05.023
Pmid 18579180
Wosid WOS:000259536900008
Url /www.elsevier.com
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English
Keyword Fish consumption; Recreational anglers; Florida; Connecticut; Minnesota; North Dakota