Pallavi Kalbande, Pournima Kale, Payal Rangari, Niloy R Datta
{"title":"Cost-Effective Evaluation of Homemade Recipes in Cancer Patients on Liquid Diet from Low-Middle-Income Group Countries","authors":"Pallavi Kalbande, Pournima Kale, Payal Rangari, Niloy R Datta","doi":"10.55289/jnutres/v11i2_23.6","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Cancer patients, on liquid diet are at a high-risk of malnutrition. 10-20% of patients are estimated to die due to malnutrition rather than malignancy itself. In low-middle-income group countries (LMICs), patients are mostly undernourished. They need cost-effective, easily available and acceptable nutritional support. The study has been undertaken to evaluate the cost-effectivity of homemade recipes vs commercially available nutritional formulations for patients on liquid diet. Recipes for both vegetarian and nonvegetarian were designed using low-cost and locally available ingredients to fulfil the daily calorie requirement of ≈2,000 kcal (30 kcal/kg for a 65 kg adult) with ≥90 gm of protein (1.5 gm/kg). Alongside, five commercial nutritional formulations were evaluated to meet the above requirements. The caloric (380 ± 80.1 kcal/100 gm, 260–474 kcal) and protein contents (32.6 ± 10.9/100 gm, 15–49 gm) in commercial supplements were variable. For providing 2,000 kcal with minimum of 90 gm protein, the cost of commercial formulations ranged from INR 745 -3,461/day (1,700 ± 946). Comparatively, the vegetarian and non-vegetarian homemade recipes were estimated to cost just INR 135/day and INR 182/day respectively. For the 2000 kcal diet, the difference in nutrient contents of commercial vs homemade preparations were non-significant, while the cost was significantly lower with homemade recipes (p=0.03). Homemade recipes designed and suited to individual needs could meet the dietary requirements for patients on liquid diet, be highly cost-effective and thereby especially suit patients from resource constraint settings, like LMICs. Keywords: Nutrition, Cancer, Liquid diet, Malnutrition, Low middleincome countries, Nutrition supplement","PeriodicalId":16096,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Food and Nutrition Research","volume":"69 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-09-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Food and Nutrition Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.55289/jnutres/v11i2_23.6","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Cancer patients, on liquid diet are at a high-risk of malnutrition. 10-20% of patients are estimated to die due to malnutrition rather than malignancy itself. In low-middle-income group countries (LMICs), patients are mostly undernourished. They need cost-effective, easily available and acceptable nutritional support. The study has been undertaken to evaluate the cost-effectivity of homemade recipes vs commercially available nutritional formulations for patients on liquid diet. Recipes for both vegetarian and nonvegetarian were designed using low-cost and locally available ingredients to fulfil the daily calorie requirement of ≈2,000 kcal (30 kcal/kg for a 65 kg adult) with ≥90 gm of protein (1.5 gm/kg). Alongside, five commercial nutritional formulations were evaluated to meet the above requirements. The caloric (380 ± 80.1 kcal/100 gm, 260–474 kcal) and protein contents (32.6 ± 10.9/100 gm, 15–49 gm) in commercial supplements were variable. For providing 2,000 kcal with minimum of 90 gm protein, the cost of commercial formulations ranged from INR 745 -3,461/day (1,700 ± 946). Comparatively, the vegetarian and non-vegetarian homemade recipes were estimated to cost just INR 135/day and INR 182/day respectively. For the 2000 kcal diet, the difference in nutrient contents of commercial vs homemade preparations were non-significant, while the cost was significantly lower with homemade recipes (p=0.03). Homemade recipes designed and suited to individual needs could meet the dietary requirements for patients on liquid diet, be highly cost-effective and thereby especially suit patients from resource constraint settings, like LMICs. Keywords: Nutrition, Cancer, Liquid diet, Malnutrition, Low middleincome countries, Nutrition supplement
期刊介绍:
Journal of Food and Nutrition Research (JFNR) publishes papers focusing on fundamental and applied research in chemistry, physics, microbiology, nutrition aspects, bioactivity, quality, safety, and technology of foods.