Connie Jing Yu named 2016 Atlantic region and national award winner
 Connie  Jing Nan Yu came to Halifax from Scarborough, Ontario with high hopes, but few ties.  She’d heard great things about the city, and she yearned for a new experience,  so when she was seeking a location for her graduate studies she decided that  the Mount’s Master of Science in Applied Human Nutrition (AHN) program was the  perfect opportunity for her to go for it.   
 And go for it she did. A little over two years (and much hard work) later, and  Connie’s been bestowed the Canadian Foundation for Dietetic Research’s highest  honour for nutrition students/interns – the Morgan Medal. Connie was named not  just the 2016 Atlantic recipient, but also the overall national winner.
An exceptional student researcher
 Awarded annually at the Dietitians of Canada’s conference (this year in  Winnipeg), the award celebrates exceptional student achievement, with an  emphasis on research. In Connie’s case, the award acknowledges her exceptional  achievement in research as part of her work on her graduate thesis which, she  explains, “explored how pureed pulses (peas and beans) affect appetite, food  intake and gastrointestinal comfort among nine to 14-year-olds.”
Awarded annually at the Dietitians of Canada’s conference (this year in  Winnipeg), the award celebrates exceptional student achievement, with an  emphasis on research. In Connie’s case, the award acknowledges her exceptional  achievement in research as part of her work on her graduate thesis which, she  explains, “explored how pureed pulses (peas and beans) affect appetite, food  intake and gastrointestinal comfort among nine to 14-year-olds.”
 The Canadian Foundation for Dietetic Research noted  that Connie’s study “demonstrated that cooked, pureed pulses added to pasta and  sauce led to suppression of short-term food intake, had acceptable palatability  and resulted in increased fibre intake. This research presented an effective  and practical approach in improving nutrient intake and reducing the serving  size of [starchy] food…in children and adolescents.” (Learn more about Connie’s  research here.)
 The Morgan Awards were created by the Canadian Foundation for Dietetic Research “in honour and in memory of Susan Morgan, a former CFDR manager and  dietitian who was an ardent supporter of the dietetic profession, of  practice-based research and of mentoring novice researchers. The program  recognizes a passion for research and dedication to the profession.”
Now new professional
 As part of her studies at the Mount, Connie also completed three dietetic  internships – one at Saint Mary’s University, another at the IWK Health Centre  and the third in Newfoundland with Western Health (the health authority serving  NL’s west coast).  Connie has also previously been recognized as a Scotia Scholar by the  Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation and received student research funding  from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
Connie has also previously been recognized as a Scotia Scholar by the  Nova Scotia Health Research Foundation and received student research funding  from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research.
  
 In May of 2016, Connie crossed the stage at the Mount’s spring convocation, then  returned parchment in hand to her home province of Ontario. Not only did she  leave Halifax with new knowledge and experience, but she left with new ties  too. “I met so many people at the Mount, in my program and through my  internships,” she notes.
 Asked if she misses the east coast, Connie replies, “I would love to move back  some day, if I could find the right job. I figured I’d get a few years of  experience under my belt and then see what opportunities I might find to bring  me back to Halifax.” 
 As she starts her career as a registered dietitian in independent consulting in  Toronto, the countdown to her hopeful return is on! 
(Photo 1: Connie presents her research at the 2016 Dietitians of Canada conference in Winnipeg; photo 2: Connie at the same conference with Greg Sarney, left, Executive Director of the Canadian Foundation for Dietetic Research, and Dr. Shannan Grant, right, Assistant Professor of Applied Human Nutrition at the Mount)