Estimating food consumption, micronutrient intake and the contribution of large-scale food fortification to micronutrient adequacy in Tanzania.

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Rie Goto, Liberty Mlambo, Lucia Segovia De La Revilla, Aleswa Swai, Hoyce Mshida, Alex Amos, Emilian Karugendo, Gareth Osman, Kevin Tang, Thomas Codd, Christopher Chagumaira, Elaine L Ferguson, E Louise Ander, Theresia Jumbe, Ray Masumo, Omar Dary, Jennifer Yourkavitch, Sarah Pedersen, Germana H Leyna, Monica Woldt, Edward Jm Joy
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Abstract

Objective: To assess the potential contribution of large-scale food fortification (LSFF) towards meeting dietary micronutrient requirements in Tanzania.

Design: We used household food consumption data from the National Panel Survey 2014-15 to estimate fortifiable food vehicle coverage and consumption (standardised using the adult female equivalent approach) and the prevalence at risk of inadequate apparent intake of five micronutrients included in Tanzania's fortification legislation. We modelled four LSFF scenarios: no fortification, status quo (i.e. compliance with current fortification contents) and full fortification with and without maize flour fortification.

Setting: Tanzania.

Participants: A nationally representative sample of 3290 Tanzanian households.

Results: The coverage of edible oils and maize and wheat flours (including products of wheat flour and oil such as bread and cakes) was high, with 91 percent, 88 percent and 53 percent of households consuming these commodities, respectively. We estimated that vitamin A-fortified oil could reduce the prevalence of inadequate apparent intake of vitamin A (retinol activity equivalent) from 92 percent without LSFF to 80 percent with LSFF at current fortification levels. Low industry LSFF compliance of flour fortification limits the contribution of other micronutrients, but a hypothetical full fortification scenario shows that LSFF of cereal flours could substantially reduce the prevalence at risk of inadequate intakes of iron, zinc, folate and vitamin B12.

Conclusions: The current Tanzania LSFF programme likely contributes to reducing vitamin A inadequacy. Policies that support increased compliance could improve the supply of multiple nutrients, but the prominence of small-scale maize mills restricts this theoretical benefit.

估算坦桑尼亚的食品消耗量、微量营养素摄入量以及大规模食品营养强化对微量营养素充足性的贡献。
目的评估大规模食品营养强化(LSFF)对满足坦桑尼亚膳食微量营养素需求的潜在贡献:我们利用 2014-15 年全国小组调查的家庭食品消费数据,估算了可强化食品的覆盖率和消费量(采用成年女性等量法进行标准化),以及坦桑尼亚强化立法中规定的五种微量营养素表观摄入不足的风险发生率。我们模拟了四种LSFF方案:无强化、维持现状(即遵守现行强化内容)和全面强化(包括和不包括玉米粉强化):坦桑尼亚:具有全国代表性的 3290 个坦桑尼亚家庭样本:结果:食用油、玉米粉和小麦粉(包括面包和蛋糕等小麦粉和油的制品)的覆盖率很高,分别有 91%、88% 和 53% 的家庭消费这些商品。我们估计,在目前的强化水平下,维生素 A 强化油可将维生素 A(视黄醇活性当量)表观摄入量不足的比例从无 LSFF 的 92% 降至有 LSFF 的 80%。面粉强化的行业LSFF达标率较低,这限制了其他微量营养素的贡献,但假设的全面强化方案显示,谷物面粉的LSFF可大幅降低铁、锌、叶酸和维生素B12摄入不足的风险发生率:结论:坦桑尼亚目前的全谷物营养素强化计划可能有助于减少维生素 A 摄入不足的情况。支持提高合规性的政策可以改善多种营养素的供应,但小规模玉米加工厂的存在限制了这一理论上的益处。
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来源期刊
Public Health Nutrition
Public Health Nutrition 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
6.20%
发文量
521
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Public Health Nutrition provides an international peer-reviewed forum for the publication and dissemination of research and scholarship aimed at understanding the causes of, and approaches and solutions to nutrition-related public health achievements, situations and problems around the world. The journal publishes original and commissioned articles, commentaries and discussion papers for debate. The journal is of interest to epidemiologists and health promotion specialists interested in the role of nutrition in disease prevention; academics and those involved in fieldwork and the application of research to identify practical solutions to important public health problems.
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