Affordability of healthy and water-saving dietary patterns in The Gambia.

Environmental research. Food systems Pub Date : 2025-03-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-09 DOI:10.1088/2976-601X/ad93de
Jyoti Felix, Pauline Fd Scheelbeek, Genevieve Hadida, Indira Bose, Bakary Jallow, Kris A Murray, Andrew M Prentice, Rosemary Green, Zakari Ali
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Abstract

Dietary modification has the potential to improve nutritional status and reduce environmental impacts of the food system. However, for many countries, the optimal composition of locally contextualized healthy and sustainable diets is unknown. The Gambia is vulnerable to climate-change-induced future water scarcity which may affect crop yields and the ability to supply healthy diets. This study identifies potential shifts in Gambian diets that could make diets healthier and reduce the associated agricultural water footprint (WF), and assesses the cost and affordability implications of such dietary changes. Gambian Integrated Household Survey (IHS) food consumption data was combined with market prices, food expenditure and agricultural WF data. Current dietary patterns were compared with World Health Organization (WHO) dietary guidelines and optimized using linear programming to identify least-cost diets that met nutrition recommendations and reduced agricultural water use. Optimization scenarios explored the maximum reduction in green water use that could be achieved with 'culturally-acceptable' dietary shifts, and the magnitude of shifts required to maintain green water use at current levels. On average, current diets provide adequate energy and have appropriate macronutrient composition. However, only 14% of households consume enough fruit and vegetables (F&Vs), and consumption of added sugars exceeds recommendations. With 'culturally-acceptable' changes in consumption, agricultural water use could decrease by 10%-13% or increase by 9%, depending on the baseline dietary pattern. Extreme dietary shifts will be required to maintain water use at 2015 levels with projected population growth. To meet WHO recommendations, dietary costs would increase by 43% compared to the current baseline. Healthy and green water-saving diets would require 48%-63% of average household expenditure to purchase, which is unaffordable for almost half of the population. F&Vs alone account for 31%-40% of the cost of optimized diets compared to 12% of current diets. Dietary modification has the potential to improve the nutritional quality of Gambian diets while reducing agricultural water use, but the required changes are likely to be unaffordable for a large proportion of the population. Improving availability and affordability of nutritious foods-particularly F&Vs-will be crucial for the accessibility of healthy and sustainable diets in the Gambian population.

冈比亚健康和节水饮食模式的可负担性。
饮食调整有可能改善营养状况,减少食物系统对环境的影响。然而,对于许多国家来说,当地健康和可持续饮食的最佳组成是未知的。冈比亚很容易受到气候变化引起的未来水资源短缺的影响,这可能影响作物产量和提供健康饮食的能力。本研究确定了冈比亚饮食的潜在变化,这些变化可以使饮食更健康并减少相关的农业水足迹(WF),并评估了这种饮食变化的成本和可负担性影响。冈比亚综合家庭调查(IHS)的粮食消费数据与市场价格、粮食支出和世界粮食基金会的农业数据相结合。目前的饮食模式与世界卫生组织(世卫组织)的饮食指南进行了比较,并利用线性规划进行了优化,以确定满足营养建议和减少农业用水的成本最低的饮食。优化方案探讨了通过“文化上可接受的”饮食转变可以实现的绿水使用的最大减少,以及将绿水使用维持在当前水平所需的转变幅度。平均而言,目前的日粮提供足够的能量和适当的宏量营养素组成。然而,只有14%的家庭食用了足够的水果和蔬菜(f&v),添加糖的消费量超过了建议。随着“文化上可接受的”消费变化,农业用水量可减少10%-13%或增加9%,具体取决于基线饮食模式。随着预计的人口增长,要将用水量维持在2015年的水平,就需要极端的饮食转变。为了达到世卫组织的建议,与目前的基线相比,饮食费用将增加43%。健康和绿色节水饮食需要平均家庭支出的48%-63%才能购买,这是近一半人口无法负担的。仅食品和食品就占优化饮食成本的31%-40%,而目前的饮食成本仅占12%。改变饮食有可能改善冈比亚饮食的营养质量,同时减少农业用水,但所需的改变可能对大部分人口来说是负担不起的。改善营养食品的可得性和可负担性,特别是食品和食品,对于冈比亚人口获得健康和可持续饮食至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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