Current and potential contributions of large-scale food fortification to meeting micronutrient requirements in Senegal: a modelling study using household food consumption data.

BMJ public health Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-08 DOI:10.1136/bmjph-2024-001221
Katherine P Adams, Reina Engle-Stone, Brent Wibberley, Becky L Tsang, Ann Tarini, Maguette Beye, Laura A Rowe
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Abstract

Introduction: Micronutrient deficiencies are common among women of reproductive age (WRA) and children in Senegal. Large-scale food fortification (LSFF) can help fill gaps in dietary intakes.

Methods: We used household food consumption data to model the contributions of existing LSFF programs (vitamin A-fortified refined oil and iron and folic acid-fortified wheat flour) and the potential contributions of expanding these programs to meeting the micronutrient requirements of WRA (15-49 years) and children (6-59 months).

Results: Without fortification, apparent inadequacy of household diets for meeting micronutrient requirements exceeded 70% for vitamin A, thiamin, riboflavin, folate, and zinc, was 61% for iron among WRA (43% among children), and was ~25% for vitamin B12. At estimated current compliance, fortified refined oil was predicted to reduce vitamin A inadequacy to ~35%, and could further reduce inadequacy to ~25% if compliance with the standard improved. Fortified wheat flour at estimated current compliance reduced iron and, especially, folate inadequacy, but improvements in compliance would be necessary to achieve the full potential. Beyond existing programs, expanding wheat flour fortification to include additional micronutrients was predicted to have a modest impact on thiamin and riboflavin inadequacies and larger impacts on vitamin B12 and, especially, zinc inadequacies. Adding a program to import fortified rice could further reduce inadequacies of multiple micronutrients (generally by > 10 percentage points), although potential risk of high intake of vitamin A, folic acid, and zinc among children should be carefully considered. With both wheat flour and rice fortification, predicted prevalence of vitamin A, iron, and zinc inadequacy remained above 25% in some regions, pointing to the potential need for coordinated, targeted micronutrient interventions to fully close gaps.

Conclusions: When considered alongside evidence on the cost and affordability of these programs, this evidence can help inform the development of a comprehensive micronutrient intervention strategy in Senegal.

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大规模食品强化对满足塞内加尔微量营养素需求的当前和潜在贡献:使用家庭食品消费数据的建模研究。
简介:塞内加尔育龄妇女和儿童普遍缺乏微量营养素。大规模食物强化(LSFF)可以帮助填补饮食摄入的空白。方法:我们使用家庭食品消费数据来模拟现有的LSFF计划(维生素a强化成品油和铁和叶酸强化小麦粉)的贡献,以及扩大这些计划以满足WRA(15-49岁)和儿童(6-59个月)微量营养素需求的潜在贡献。结果:在没有强化的情况下,家庭饮食对微量营养素的需求明显不足,维生素A、硫胺素、核黄素、叶酸和锌的需求超过70%,铁的需求为61%(儿童为43%),维生素B12的需求为~25%。在目前估计的合规性下,强化成品油预计将维生素A缺乏率降低到~35%,如果符合标准提高,可以进一步降低到~25%。目前,强化小麦粉的依从性降低了铁含量,特别是叶酸不足,但要充分发挥其潜力,就必须提高依从性。除了现有的计划,扩大小麦粉的强化,包括额外的微量营养素,预计对维生素B12和核黄素不足的影响不大,对维生素B12,特别是锌不足的影响更大。增加一项进口强化大米的计划可以进一步减少多种微量营养素的不足(通常减少10 - 10个百分点),尽管应该仔细考虑儿童过量摄入维生素a、叶酸和锌的潜在风险。在对小麦粉和大米进行强化的情况下,一些地区维生素A、铁和锌缺乏症的预测患病率仍在25%以上,这表明可能需要采取协调一致的、有针对性的微量营养素干预措施,以完全缩小差距。结论:当与这些项目的成本和可负担性证据一起考虑时,这些证据有助于为塞内加尔制定综合微量营养素干预战略提供信息。
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