1 Centre for the Study of Social and Environmental Determinants of Nutrition, Population Health, Health Systems and Innovation, Human Sciences Research Council, PO Bag X9182, Cape Town 8000, South Africa.
2 Chronic Diseases of Lifestyle Unit, Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
Public Health Nutr. 2014 Jun;17(6):1363-74. doi: 10.1017/S1368980013001158. Epub 2013 May 17.
To review studies examining the nutritional value of street foods and their contribution to the diet of consumers in developing countries.
The electronic databases PubMed/MEDLINE, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, Proquest Health and Science Direct were searched for articles on street foods in developing countries that included findings on nutritional value.
From a total of 639 articles, twenty-three studies were retained since they met the inclusion criteria. In summary, daily energy intake from street foods in adults ranged from 13 % to 50 % of energy and in children from 13 % to 40 % of energy. Although the amounts differed from place to place, even at the lowest values of the percentage of energy intake range, energy from street foods made a significant contribution to the diet. Furthermore, the majority of studies suggest that street foods contributed significantly to the daily intake of protein, often at 50 % of the RDA. The data on fat and carbohydrate intakes are of some concern because of the assumed high contribution of street foods to the total intakes of fat, trans-fat, salt and sugar in numerous studies and their possible role in the development of obesity and non-communicable diseases. Few studies have provided data on the intake of micronutrients, but these tended to be high for Fe and vitamin A while low for Ca and thiamin.
Street foods make a significant contribution to energy and protein intakes of people in developing countries and their use should be encouraged if they are healthy traditional foods.
综述发展中国家街头食品营养价值及其对消费者饮食贡献的研究。
检索电子数据库 PubMed/MEDLINE、Web of Science、Cochrane 图书馆、Proquest Health 和 Science Direct 中有关发展中国家街头食品的文章,纳入包含营养价值发现的文章。
从总共 639 篇文章中,保留了 23 项研究,因为它们符合纳入标准。总的来说,成年人从街头食品中获得的日能量摄入占总能量的 13%至 50%,儿童占 13%至 40%。尽管各地的摄入量有所不同,但即使在能量摄入范围的最低百分比值,来自街头食品的能量对饮食也有显著贡献。此外,大多数研究表明,街头食品对蛋白质的日摄入量有显著贡献,通常占 RDA 的 50%。由于许多研究中假设街头食品对总脂肪、反式脂肪、盐和糖的摄入量有较高的贡献,以及它们可能在肥胖和非传染性疾病的发展中发挥的作用,因此对脂肪、碳水化合物摄入量的数据存在一些担忧。少数研究提供了关于微量营养素摄入量的数据,但这些数据往往对铁和维生素 A 较高,而对钙和硫胺素较低。
街头食品对发展中国家人们的能量和蛋白质摄入量有显著贡献,如果它们是健康的传统食品,应鼓励使用。