Public Health Nutrition | |
Improving the nutritional status of food-insecure women: first, let them eat what they like | |
Tony Jinguang Li1  Valerie Tarasuk1  Lynn McIntyre1  | |
关键词: Food insecurity; Dietary reference intake; Nutritional planning; Women; | |
DOI : 10.1017/S1368980007702902 | |
学科分类:卫生学 | |
来源: Cambridge University Press | |
【 摘 要 】
ObjectiveTo determine the extent to which identified nutrient inadequacies in the dietary intakes of a sample of food-insecure women could be ameliorated by increasing their access to the ‘healthy’ foods they typically eat.DesignMerged datasets of 226 food-insecure women who provided at least three 24-hour dietary intake recalls over the course of a month. Dietary modelling, with energy adjustment for severe food insecurity, explored the effect of adding a serving of the woman's own, and the group's typically chosen, nutrient-rich foods on the estimated prevalence of nutrient inadequacy.Setting and subjectsOne study included participants residing in 22 diverse community clusters from the Atlantic Provinces of Canada, and the second study included food bank attendees in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Of the 226 participants, 78% lived alone with their children.ResultsWhile nutritional vulnerability remained after modelling, adding a single serving of either typically chosen ‘healthy’ foods from women's own diets or healthy food choices normative to the population reduced the prevalence of inadequacy by at least half for most nutrients. Correction for energy deficits resulting from severe food insecurity contributed a mean additional 20% improvement in nutrient intakes.ConclusionsFood-insecure women would sustain substantive nutritional gains if they had greater access to their personal healthy food preferences and if the dietary compromises associated with severe food insecurity were abated. Increased resources to access such choices should be a priority.
【 授权许可】
Unknown
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO201911300160121ZK.pdf | 126KB | download |