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Intake of ultra-processed food, dietary diversity and the risk of nutritional inadequacy among adults in India

Authors :
Srishti Mediratta
Santu Ghosh
Pulkit Mathur
Source :
Public Health Nutrition, Vol 26, Pp 2849-2858 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Objective: This study assessed diet diversity and consumption of ultra-processed foods and explored its impact on macronutrient intake and risk of micronutrient inadequacy. Design: Cross-sectional, non-probability snowball sampling. Setting: Nutrient intake was assessed using 24-h dietary recall method and diet diversity through FAO-diet diversity score (DDS). Mann–Whitney U test was used to assess differences in risk of inadequacy across gender. Spearman’s rank correlation assessed associations between energy contributed by ultra-processed food and risk of nutrient inadequacy. Participants: A total of 589 adults (20–40 years) belonging to upper-middle and high-income groups. Results: The average individual DDS was 4·4 ± 0·6. Most of the participants (>80 %) had intakes less than national recommendations of pulses/eggs/flesh foods, milk/milk products, fruits, vegetables and nuts. Ultra-processed foods contributed to 17 % of total energy intake, 12 % of protein, 17 % of carbohydrate, 29 % of added sugar, 20 % of total fat and 33 % of Na intake. The average risk of nutrient inadequacies for Zn (98 % v. 75 %), folate (67 % v. 22 %) and niacin (83 % v. 44 %) was higher among males than females (P < 0·001). The average risk of nutrient inadequacies for Fe (58 % v. 7 %), vitamin B6 (95 % v. 90 %) and vitamin A (68 % v. 44 %) was higher among females than males (P < 0·001). There was a positive correlation between energy contributed by ultra-processed food and risk of niacin (ρ = 0·136, P = 0·001) and folate (ρ = 0·089, P = 0·049) inadequacy. Conclusion: Reformulating ultra-processed food to reduce fat, sugar and salt and increase micronutrients and behaviour change communication strategies that promote dietary diversity will improve micronutrient adequacy and diet quality.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13689800 and 14752727
Volume :
26
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Public Health Nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0910b0030e5347828c37422f3170937c
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980023002112