The Potential for Bouillon Fortification to Reduce Dietary Micronutrient Inadequacy: Modeling Analyses Using National Survey Data from Cameroon, Ghana, and Haiti

IF 3.8 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Current Developments in Nutrition Pub Date : 2024-11-01 DOI:10.1016/j.cdnut.2024.104485
Reina Engle-Stone , Sika M Kumordzie , Hanqi Luo , Kimberly Ryan Wessells , Seth Adu-Afarwuah , Alex Njebayi , Ismael Teta , Yves-Laurent Régis , Emmanuel Gyimah , Stephen A Vosti , Katherine P Adams
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Abstract

Background

Bouillon is commonly consumed in some countries where micronutrient deficiencies are prevalent, but it has not been widely adopted as a micronutrient fortification vehicle.

Objectives

We modeled the potential impacts of bouillon fortification on dietary micronutrient adequacy to inform future discussions around bouillon fortification programs.

Methods

We analyzed the dietary intake of women of reproductive age (WRA) and 1- to 5-y-old children from a national dietary survey in Cameroon, and “apparent intake” (using the nutrient density approach) of WRA, children, and men from 3 household surveys in Cameroon, Ghana, and Haiti. We examined (apparent) intake of bouillon and simulated the impacts of bouillon fortification with varying levels of vitamin A, folic acid, vitamin B12, iron, and zinc on inadequate intake (below the estimated average requirement) and intake above the tolerable upper intake level (UL). Scenarios accounted for current mandatory fortification programs and different assumptions about iron absorption from bouillon.

Results

Bouillon was consumed by >67% of households in Ghana and >90% in Haiti and Cameroon. Median (apparent) consumption ranged from 1.6 to 2.1 g/d for WRA, 0.7 to 1.0 g/d for children, and 1.8 to 2.2 g/d for men. Bouillon fortification at the highest micronutrient concentration modeled was predicted to reduce dietary inadequacy by 21–52 percentage points (pp) for vitamin A; 3–47pp for folic acid, and 4–90pp for vitamin B12, depending on the country and population group. In contrast, predicted impacts for iron were modest (2–17pp reduction) but would increase if absorption of iron from bouillon were enhanced. Simulated zinc fortification reduced inadequacy by 12–50pp, but zinc intake above the UL exceeded 10% among children in almost all scenarios.

Conclusions

Modeling indicates that bouillon fortification could improve dietary micronutrient adequacy beyond existing fortification programs. Further work is needed to identify fortification levels that meet criteria for nutritional benefit, technical and commercial feasibility, affordability, and cost-effectiveness.
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肉汤强化对减少膳食微量营养素不足的潜力:利用喀麦隆、加纳和海地全国调查数据进行的模型分析
背景在一些普遍存在微量营养素缺乏症的国家,人们经常食用肉汤,但肉汤并没有被广泛地用作微量营养素强化剂。方法我们分析了喀麦隆全国膳食调查中育龄妇女(WRA)和1-5岁儿童的膳食摄入量,以及喀麦隆、加纳和海地3次家庭调查中育龄妇女、儿童和男性的 "表观摄入量"(采用营养素密度法)。我们研究了肉汤的(表观)摄入量,并模拟了在肉汤中添加不同水平的维生素 A、叶酸、维生素 B12、铁和锌对摄入量不足(低于估计平均需求量)和摄入量高于可耐受摄入量上限(UL)的影响。结果加纳有 67% 的家庭食用肉汤,海地和喀麦隆有 90% 的家庭食用肉汤。WRA的中位(表观)消费量为每天1.6至2.1克,儿童为每天0.7至1.0克,男性为每天1.8至2.2克。根据国家和人群的不同,以最高微量营养素浓度为模型进行的肉汤强化,可使维生素A的膳食不足率降低21-52个百分点;叶酸的膳食不足率降低3-47个百分点;维生素B12的膳食不足率降低4-90个百分点。相比之下,对铁的预测影响不大(减少 2-17个百分点),但如果加强对肉汤中铁的吸收,影响会增加。模拟锌强化可使锌摄入不足率降低12-50个百分点,但几乎在所有情况下,儿童锌摄入量都超过了10%。需要进一步开展工作,以确定符合营养益处、技术和商业可行性、可负担性和成本效益标准的强化水平。
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来源期刊
Current Developments in Nutrition
Current Developments in Nutrition NUTRITION & DIETETICS-
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
4.20%
发文量
1327
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊最新文献
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