Dr. Wu is a general pediatric gastroenterologist with a focus in nutrition and nutrition-related health disorders. Her research interests include pediatric obesity and nutrition epidemiology and health services research. In Boston, she attends on the inpatient nutrition and procedure services. Her outpatient general gastroenterology clinic at Martha Eliot Health Center in Jamaica Plain.
Approach to Care
I believe nutrition plays an integral role in the comprehensive care of patients, which is what drew me to Pediatric Gastroenterology & Nutrition. I am passionate about clinical care, pediatric obesity and nutrition health services research, and health equity.
Publications
Household Nutrition Security Scale (HNSS): Further Establishing Validity and Reliability in a Statewide Sample in Massachusetts. View Abstract
Development and application of a cost tool for a primary care-based intensive health behaviour and lifestyle treatment. View Abstract
Caregiver and Pediatrician Perspectives on a Meal Kit Delivery Program for Children With Food Insecurity and Obesity: A Qualitative Analysis. View Abstract
Neighborhood Food Access in Early Life and Trajectories of Child Body Mass Index and Obesity. View Abstract
Satisfaction with a meal kit delivery program and feasibility of a phase I trial in the intervening in food insecurity to reduce and mitigate (InFoRM) childhood obesity study. View Abstract
Birth outcomes in relation to neighborhood food access and individual food insecurity during pregnancy in the Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes (ECHO)-wide cohort study. View Abstract
Childhood Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Consumption: an Agent-Based Model of Context-Specific Reduction Efforts. View Abstract
Plant-Based Family Food Packages and Weight Change in Children During the COVID-19 Pandemic. View Abstract
Developmental Contributions to Obesity: Nutritional Exposures in the First Thousand Days. View Abstract
Sociodemographic Differences of Hospitalization and Associations of Resource Utilization for Failure to Thrive. View Abstract
An agent-based model of child sugar-sweetened beverage consumption: implications for policies and practices. View Abstract