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Effects of a food-based intervention on markers of micronutrient status among Indian women of low socio-economic status.

Effects of a food-based intervention on markers of micronutrient status among Indian women of low socio-economic status.
Effects of a food-based intervention on markers of micronutrient status among Indian women of low socio-economic status.
Intakes of micronutrient-rich foods are low among Indian women of reproductive age. We investigated whether consumption of a food-based micronutrient-rich snack increased markers of blood micronutrient concentrations when compared with a control snack. Non-pregnant women (n 222) aged 14–35 years living in a Mumbai slum were randomised to receive a treatment snack (containing green leafy vegetables, dried fruit and whole milk powder), or a control snack containing foods of low micronutrient content such as wheat flour, potato and tapioca. The snacks were consumed under observation 6 d per week for 12 weeks, compliance was recorded, and blood was collected at 0 and 12 weeks. Food-frequency data were collected at both time points. Compliance (defined as the proportion of women who consumed ? 3 snacks/week) was >85 % in both groups. We assessed the effects of group allocation on 12-week nutrient concentrations using ANCOVA models with respective 0-week concentrations, BMI, compliance, standard of living, fruit and green leafy vegetable consumption and use of synthetic nutrients as covariates. The treatment snack significantly increased ?-carotene concentrations (treatment effect: 47·1 nmol/l, 95 % CI 6·5, 87·7). There was no effect of group allocation on concentrations of ferritin, retinol, ascorbate, folate or vitamin B12. The present study shows that locally sourced foods can be made into acceptable snacks that may increase serum ?-carotene concentrations among women of reproductive age. However, no increase in circulating concentrations of the other nutrients measured was observed
food-based interventions, india, micronutrient status
0007-1145
813-821
Kehoe, S.H.
534e5729-632b-4b4f-8401-164d8c20aa26
Chopra, H.
ebf7e373-03c3-49ad-9356-487600da5868
Sahariah, S.A.
617c5c15-97be-45e8-8529-a5f306dbccf3
Bhat, D.
a2009ded-084b-4ea7-b5d8-3b508c1e91ba
Munshi, R.P.
cdac2754-6521-48c5-9aaa-15e7eeb6d085
Panchal, F.
fc0bc602-3512-4c08-8c7f-1200fabb626e
Young, S.
9a2845ef-9d49-43c2-8ed3-34d0df212413
Brown, N.
8e202102-bb2a-4257-aef6-e07737a68a92
Tarwande, Dnyaneshwar
f7776fea-4030-40df-a29b-becc18edb194
Gandhi, Meera
b087d076-c4eb-45ca-9ab4-777303c940a0
Margetts, B.
d415f4a1-d572-4ebc-be25-f54886cb4788
Potdar, R.D.
f1883ab3-e7e9-480c-8103-56fa64d6bc76
Fall, C.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18
Kehoe, S.H.
534e5729-632b-4b4f-8401-164d8c20aa26
Chopra, H.
ebf7e373-03c3-49ad-9356-487600da5868
Sahariah, S.A.
617c5c15-97be-45e8-8529-a5f306dbccf3
Bhat, D.
a2009ded-084b-4ea7-b5d8-3b508c1e91ba
Munshi, R.P.
cdac2754-6521-48c5-9aaa-15e7eeb6d085
Panchal, F.
fc0bc602-3512-4c08-8c7f-1200fabb626e
Young, S.
9a2845ef-9d49-43c2-8ed3-34d0df212413
Brown, N.
8e202102-bb2a-4257-aef6-e07737a68a92
Tarwande, Dnyaneshwar
f7776fea-4030-40df-a29b-becc18edb194
Gandhi, Meera
b087d076-c4eb-45ca-9ab4-777303c940a0
Margetts, B.
d415f4a1-d572-4ebc-be25-f54886cb4788
Potdar, R.D.
f1883ab3-e7e9-480c-8103-56fa64d6bc76
Fall, C.
7171a105-34f5-4131-89d7-1aa639893b18

Kehoe, S.H., Chopra, H., Sahariah, S.A., Bhat, D., Munshi, R.P., Panchal, F., Young, S., Brown, N., Tarwande, Dnyaneshwar, Gandhi, Meera, Margetts, B., Potdar, R.D. and Fall, C. (2015) Effects of a food-based intervention on markers of micronutrient status among Indian women of low socio-economic status. British Journal of Nutrition, 113 (5), 813-821. (doi:10.1017/S000711451400419X). (PMID:25677713)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Intakes of micronutrient-rich foods are low among Indian women of reproductive age. We investigated whether consumption of a food-based micronutrient-rich snack increased markers of blood micronutrient concentrations when compared with a control snack. Non-pregnant women (n 222) aged 14–35 years living in a Mumbai slum were randomised to receive a treatment snack (containing green leafy vegetables, dried fruit and whole milk powder), or a control snack containing foods of low micronutrient content such as wheat flour, potato and tapioca. The snacks were consumed under observation 6 d per week for 12 weeks, compliance was recorded, and blood was collected at 0 and 12 weeks. Food-frequency data were collected at both time points. Compliance (defined as the proportion of women who consumed ? 3 snacks/week) was >85 % in both groups. We assessed the effects of group allocation on 12-week nutrient concentrations using ANCOVA models with respective 0-week concentrations, BMI, compliance, standard of living, fruit and green leafy vegetable consumption and use of synthetic nutrients as covariates. The treatment snack significantly increased ?-carotene concentrations (treatment effect: 47·1 nmol/l, 95 % CI 6·5, 87·7). There was no effect of group allocation on concentrations of ferritin, retinol, ascorbate, folate or vitamin B12. The present study shows that locally sourced foods can be made into acceptable snacks that may increase serum ?-carotene concentrations among women of reproductive age. However, no increase in circulating concentrations of the other nutrients measured was observed

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 6 November 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 February 2015
Published date: 14 March 2015
Keywords: food-based interventions, india, micronutrient status
Organisations: MRC Life-Course Epidemiology Unit

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 381217
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/381217
ISSN: 0007-1145
PURE UUID: c4945b3a-eaca-4c36-8abe-da720fd7d6a7
ORCID for S.H. Kehoe: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2584-7999
ORCID for C. Fall: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4402-5552

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 25 Sep 2015 13:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:02

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Contributors

Author: S.H. Kehoe ORCID iD
Author: H. Chopra
Author: S.A. Sahariah
Author: D. Bhat
Author: R.P. Munshi
Author: F. Panchal
Author: S. Young
Author: N. Brown
Author: Dnyaneshwar Tarwande
Author: Meera Gandhi
Author: B. Margetts
Author: R.D. Potdar
Author: C. Fall ORCID iD

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