Centre for the Study of Social and Environmental Determinants of Nutrition, Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC), Cape Town, South Africa.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Oct 13;11:801. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-801.
During the last century we have seen wide-reaching changes in diet, nutritional status and life expectancy. The change in diet and physical activity patterns has become known as the nutrition transition. At any given time, a country or region within a country may be at different stages within this transition. This paper examines a range of nutrition-related indicators for countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and attempts to develop a typical model of a country in transition.
Based on the availability of data, 40 countries in SSA were selected for analysis. Data were obtained from the World Health Organisation, Demographic and Health Surveys and the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations. Multiple linear regression analysis (MLRA) was used to explore the determinants of infant mortality. A six point score was developed to identify each country's stage in the nutrition transition.
MLRA showed that underweight-for-age, protein and the percentage of exclusively breastfed infants were associated with the infant mortality rate (IMR). The majority of countries (n = 26) used in the analysis had nutrition transition scores of zero and one. Most of them had a high prevalence of infant mortality, children that were stunted or underweight-for-age, small percentages of women that were overweight and obese, and low intakes of energy, protein, and fat. Countries with the highest scores include South Africa, Ghana, Gabon, Cape Verde and Senegal which had relatively low IMRs, high levels of obesity/overweight, and low levels of underweight in women, as well as high intakes of energy and fat. These countries display classic signs of a population well established in the nutrition-related non-communicable disease phase of the nutrition transition.
Countries in SSA are clearly undergoing a nutrition transition. More than half of them are still in the early stage, while a few have reached a point where changes in dietary patterns are affecting health outcomes in a large portion of the population. Those in the early stage of the transition are especially important, since primordial prevention can still be introduced.
在上个世纪,我们见证了饮食、营养状况和预期寿命的广泛变化。饮食和身体活动模式的变化被称为营养转型。在任何特定时间,一个国家或国家内的一个地区可能处于这一转型的不同阶段。本文考察了撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)国家的一系列营养相关指标,并试图制定一个处于转型期国家的典型模式。
根据数据的可用性,选择了 40 个 SSA 国家进行分析。数据来自世界卫生组织、人口与健康调查和联合国粮食及农业组织。多元线性回归分析(MLRA)用于探索婴儿死亡率的决定因素。制定了一个六点评分系统来确定每个国家在营养转型中的阶段。
MLRA 表明,体重不足、蛋白质和纯母乳喂养婴儿的比例与婴儿死亡率(IMR)相关。分析中使用的大多数国家(n=26)的营养转型评分均为零和一。其中大多数国家婴儿死亡率较高、发育迟缓或体重不足的儿童比例较高、超重和肥胖的妇女人数比例较低,以及能量、蛋白质和脂肪的摄入量较低。得分最高的国家包括南非、加纳、加蓬、佛得角和塞内加尔,这些国家的 IMR 相对较低、肥胖/超重率较高、妇女体重不足率较低,以及能量和脂肪的摄入量较高。这些国家显示出人群在营养相关非传染性疾病阶段的营养转型中处于相对成熟阶段的典型特征。
SSA 国家显然正在经历营养转型。其中一半以上仍处于早期阶段,而少数国家已经达到了饮食模式的变化正在影响大部分人口健康结果的阶段。那些处于转型早期阶段的国家尤为重要,因为仍可引入初级预防措施。