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Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)

Iron biofortified beans and carotenoid enriched cassava are proposed as a solution to combat iron and vitamin A deficiencies, respectively, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). To inform the need for biofortified foods, we conducted a survey in 2014 in two provinces of the DRC, South Kivu and...

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Autores principales: Moumin, Najma A., Angel, Moira Donahue, Karakochuk, Crystal D., Michaux, Kristina D., Moursi, Mourad, Sawadogo, Kossiwavi Améwono Ayassou, Foley, Jennifer, Hawes, Meaghan D., Whitfield, Kyly C., Tugirimana, Pierrot L., Bahizire, Esto, Akilimali, Pierre Z., Boy, Erick, Sullivan, Thomas R., Green, Tim J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7292409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32530922
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223393
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author Moumin, Najma A.
Angel, Moira Donahue
Karakochuk, Crystal D.
Michaux, Kristina D.
Moursi, Mourad
Sawadogo, Kossiwavi Améwono Ayassou
Foley, Jennifer
Hawes, Meaghan D.
Whitfield, Kyly C.
Tugirimana, Pierrot L.
Bahizire, Esto
Akilimali, Pierre Z.
Boy, Erick
Sullivan, Thomas R.
Green, Tim J.
author_facet Moumin, Najma A.
Angel, Moira Donahue
Karakochuk, Crystal D.
Michaux, Kristina D.
Moursi, Mourad
Sawadogo, Kossiwavi Améwono Ayassou
Foley, Jennifer
Hawes, Meaghan D.
Whitfield, Kyly C.
Tugirimana, Pierrot L.
Bahizire, Esto
Akilimali, Pierre Z.
Boy, Erick
Sullivan, Thomas R.
Green, Tim J.
author_sort Moumin, Najma A.
collection PubMed
description Iron biofortified beans and carotenoid enriched cassava are proposed as a solution to combat iron and vitamin A deficiencies, respectively, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). To inform the need for biofortified foods, we conducted a survey in 2014 in two provinces of the DRC, South Kivu and Kongo Central. Unexpectedly, women of reproductive age (WRA; 15–49 y) and their children (6–59 m) had a low prevalence of biochemical iron and vitamin A deficiency, based on ferritin and retinol binding protein, respectively. To better understand the lack of biochemical deficiency of these nutrients, we examined the prevalence of inadequate intake for these and other select nutrients. Dietary intake was assessed using 24-hour recalls among 744 mother-child dyads. Repeat recalls on a non-consecutive day were conducted with a subsample of the study population to account for intra-individual variation and estimate usual intake. In WRA, the prevalence of inadequate iron intakes were 33% and 29% in South Kivu and Kongo Central, respecitvely. The prevalence of inadequate vitamin A intakes among WRA was low in South Kivu (18%) and negligible in Kongo Central (1%). Iron inadequacy was highest in infants (6–11 m) at 82% and 64% in South Kivu and Kongo Central, respectively. Among older children (12–59 m) in both provinces, the prevalence of iron inadequacy was similar at ~20%. There was a high prevalence of inadequate zinc intake in women and children (i.e. 79–86% among WRA and 56–91% among children 6–59 m) consistent with our findings of a high prevalence of low serum zinc in the same sample. Dietary data here corroborate the low prevalence of biochemical vitamin A deficiency but not iron. However, any change to the supply of red palm oil (primary source of vitamin A) would dramatically reduce population vitamin A intakes, thus a carotenoid enriched cassava program may be beneficial as a safety net measure. Crops biofortified with zinc also appear warranted. We caution that our findings cannot be extrapolated to the entire Congo where diverse agro-ecological landscape exist or when political and environmental shocks occur which challenge food production.
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spelling pubmed-72924092020-06-18 Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) Moumin, Najma A. Angel, Moira Donahue Karakochuk, Crystal D. Michaux, Kristina D. Moursi, Mourad Sawadogo, Kossiwavi Améwono Ayassou Foley, Jennifer Hawes, Meaghan D. Whitfield, Kyly C. Tugirimana, Pierrot L. Bahizire, Esto Akilimali, Pierre Z. Boy, Erick Sullivan, Thomas R. Green, Tim J. PLoS One Research Article Iron biofortified beans and carotenoid enriched cassava are proposed as a solution to combat iron and vitamin A deficiencies, respectively, in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). To inform the need for biofortified foods, we conducted a survey in 2014 in two provinces of the DRC, South Kivu and Kongo Central. Unexpectedly, women of reproductive age (WRA; 15–49 y) and their children (6–59 m) had a low prevalence of biochemical iron and vitamin A deficiency, based on ferritin and retinol binding protein, respectively. To better understand the lack of biochemical deficiency of these nutrients, we examined the prevalence of inadequate intake for these and other select nutrients. Dietary intake was assessed using 24-hour recalls among 744 mother-child dyads. Repeat recalls on a non-consecutive day were conducted with a subsample of the study population to account for intra-individual variation and estimate usual intake. In WRA, the prevalence of inadequate iron intakes were 33% and 29% in South Kivu and Kongo Central, respecitvely. The prevalence of inadequate vitamin A intakes among WRA was low in South Kivu (18%) and negligible in Kongo Central (1%). Iron inadequacy was highest in infants (6–11 m) at 82% and 64% in South Kivu and Kongo Central, respectively. Among older children (12–59 m) in both provinces, the prevalence of iron inadequacy was similar at ~20%. There was a high prevalence of inadequate zinc intake in women and children (i.e. 79–86% among WRA and 56–91% among children 6–59 m) consistent with our findings of a high prevalence of low serum zinc in the same sample. Dietary data here corroborate the low prevalence of biochemical vitamin A deficiency but not iron. However, any change to the supply of red palm oil (primary source of vitamin A) would dramatically reduce population vitamin A intakes, thus a carotenoid enriched cassava program may be beneficial as a safety net measure. Crops biofortified with zinc also appear warranted. We caution that our findings cannot be extrapolated to the entire Congo where diverse agro-ecological landscape exist or when political and environmental shocks occur which challenge food production. Public Library of Science 2020-06-12 /pmc/articles/PMC7292409/ /pubmed/32530922 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223393 Text en © 2020 Moumin et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Moumin, Najma A.
Angel, Moira Donahue
Karakochuk, Crystal D.
Michaux, Kristina D.
Moursi, Mourad
Sawadogo, Kossiwavi Améwono Ayassou
Foley, Jennifer
Hawes, Meaghan D.
Whitfield, Kyly C.
Tugirimana, Pierrot L.
Bahizire, Esto
Akilimali, Pierre Z.
Boy, Erick
Sullivan, Thomas R.
Green, Tim J.
Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
title Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
title_full Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
title_fullStr Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
title_full_unstemmed Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
title_short Micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in South Kivu and Kongo Central, Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
title_sort micronutrient intake and prevalence of micronutrient inadequacy among women (15-49 y) and children (6-59 mo) in south kivu and kongo central, democratic republic of the congo (drc)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7292409/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32530922
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0223393
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