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Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age

Overlapping micronutrient interventions might increase the risk of excessive micronutrient intake, with potentially adverse health effects. To evaluate how strategies currently implemented in Benin and Ghana contribute to micronutrient intake in women of reproductive age (WRA), and to assess the ris...

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Autores principales: Dass, Mamta, Nyako, Jolene, Tortoe, Charles, Fanou-Fogny, Nadia, Nago, Eunice, Hounhouigan, Joseph, Berger, Jacques, Wieringa, Frank, Greffeuille, Valerie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8308306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34371796
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13072286
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author Dass, Mamta
Nyako, Jolene
Tortoe, Charles
Fanou-Fogny, Nadia
Nago, Eunice
Hounhouigan, Joseph
Berger, Jacques
Wieringa, Frank
Greffeuille, Valerie
author_facet Dass, Mamta
Nyako, Jolene
Tortoe, Charles
Fanou-Fogny, Nadia
Nago, Eunice
Hounhouigan, Joseph
Berger, Jacques
Wieringa, Frank
Greffeuille, Valerie
author_sort Dass, Mamta
collection PubMed
description Overlapping micronutrient interventions might increase the risk of excessive micronutrient intake, with potentially adverse health effects. To evaluate how strategies currently implemented in Benin and Ghana contribute to micronutrient intake in women of reproductive age (WRA), and to assess the risk for excess intakes, scenarios of basic rural and urban diets were built, and different on-going interventions were added. We estimated micronutrient intakes for all different scenarios. Four types of intervention were included in the scenarios: fortification, biofortification, supplementation and use of locally available nutrient-rich foods. Basic diets contributed poorly to daily micronutrient intake in WRA. Fortification of oil and salt were essential to reach daily requirements for vitamin A and iodine, while fortified flour contributed less. Biofortified products could make an important contribution to the coverage of vitamin A needs, while they were not sufficient to cover the needs of WRA. Iron and folic acid supplementation was a major contributor in the intake of iron and folate, but only in pregnant and lactating women. Risk of excess were found for three micronutrients (vitamin A, folic acid and niacin) in specific contexts, with excess only coming from voluntary fortified food, supplementation and the simultaneous overlap of several interventions. Better regulation and control of fortification and targeting of supplementation could avoid excess intakes.
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spelling pubmed-83083062021-07-25 Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age Dass, Mamta Nyako, Jolene Tortoe, Charles Fanou-Fogny, Nadia Nago, Eunice Hounhouigan, Joseph Berger, Jacques Wieringa, Frank Greffeuille, Valerie Nutrients Article Overlapping micronutrient interventions might increase the risk of excessive micronutrient intake, with potentially adverse health effects. To evaluate how strategies currently implemented in Benin and Ghana contribute to micronutrient intake in women of reproductive age (WRA), and to assess the risk for excess intakes, scenarios of basic rural and urban diets were built, and different on-going interventions were added. We estimated micronutrient intakes for all different scenarios. Four types of intervention were included in the scenarios: fortification, biofortification, supplementation and use of locally available nutrient-rich foods. Basic diets contributed poorly to daily micronutrient intake in WRA. Fortification of oil and salt were essential to reach daily requirements for vitamin A and iodine, while fortified flour contributed less. Biofortified products could make an important contribution to the coverage of vitamin A needs, while they were not sufficient to cover the needs of WRA. Iron and folic acid supplementation was a major contributor in the intake of iron and folate, but only in pregnant and lactating women. Risk of excess were found for three micronutrients (vitamin A, folic acid and niacin) in specific contexts, with excess only coming from voluntary fortified food, supplementation and the simultaneous overlap of several interventions. Better regulation and control of fortification and targeting of supplementation could avoid excess intakes. MDPI 2021-07-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8308306/ /pubmed/34371796 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13072286 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Dass, Mamta
Nyako, Jolene
Tortoe, Charles
Fanou-Fogny, Nadia
Nago, Eunice
Hounhouigan, Joseph
Berger, Jacques
Wieringa, Frank
Greffeuille, Valerie
Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age
title Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age
title_full Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age
title_fullStr Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age
title_short Comparison of Micronutrient Intervention Strategies in Ghana and Benin to Cover Micronutrient Needs: Simulation of Bene-Fits and Risks in Women of Reproductive Age
title_sort comparison of micronutrient intervention strategies in ghana and benin to cover micronutrient needs: simulation of bene-fits and risks in women of reproductive age
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8308306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34371796
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu13072286
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