Singh Archna, Dhasmana Ayushi, Bandhu Ashish, Kapoor Ridhima, Baalasubramanian Sivasankar, Ghosh-Jerath Suparna
Department of Biochemistry, All India Institute of Medical Sciences, New Delhi, India.
The George Institute for Global Health, 308, Third Floor, Elegance Tower, Plot No.8, Jasola District Centre, New Delhi, 110025, India.
BMC Nutr. 2023 Jan 27;9(1):20. doi: 10.1186/s40795-023-00669-1.
Many indigenous communities reside in biodiverse environments replete with natural food sources but show poor access and utilization.
To understand the links between indigenous food access, dietary intakes, and biomarkers, we conducted a cross-sectional study among women of the Santhal Community (n = 211) from 17 villages in the Godda district of Jharkhand, India. Survey methods included household surveys, dietary intake assessment (24 HDR) and micronutrient and inflammatory biomarkers' estimation.
The diversity in access to foods from different natural sources expressed as Food access diversity index was low. This led to poor consumption and thus a low Minimum Dietary Diversity. The mean nutrient intake was less than the estimated average requirement for all nutrients. Women with higher dietary diversity scores had higher nutrient intakes. Thiamine and calcium intakes were significantly higher in women consuming indigenous foods than non-consumers. One-fourth of the women had elevated levels of inflammatory biomarkers. The prevalence of iron deficiency was approximately 70%. Vitamin A insufficiency (measured as retinol-binding protein) was observed in around 33.6% women, while 28.4% were deficient. Household access to natural food sources was associated with specific biomarkers. The access to kitchen garden (baari) was positively associated with retinol-binding protein levels and negatively with inflammatory biomarkers, while access to ponds was positively associated with ferritin levels.
The findings highlight the role of access to diverse natural foods resources, including indigenous foods, for improving nutrition security in indigenous communities. Nutrition and health programs promoting indigenous food sources should include the assessment of biomarkers for effective monitoring and surveillance.
许多土著社区居住在生物多样性丰富、自然食物来源充足的环境中,但食物获取和利用情况却很差。
为了解土著食物获取、饮食摄入量与生物标志物之间的联系,我们在印度贾坎德邦戈达区17个村庄的桑塔尔社区(n = 211)女性中开展了一项横断面研究。调查方法包括家庭调查、饮食摄入量评估(24小时膳食回顾)以及微量营养素和炎症生物标志物的测定。
以食物获取多样性指数表示的不同自然来源食物的获取多样性较低。这导致消费量低,进而最低膳食多样性也低。所有营养素的平均摄入量均低于估计平均需求量。饮食多样性得分较高的女性营养素摄入量较高。食用土著食物的女性硫胺素和钙的摄入量显著高于非食用者。四分之一的女性炎症生物标志物水平升高。缺铁患病率约为70%。约33.6%的女性存在维生素A不足(以视黄醇结合蛋白衡量),28.4%的女性缺乏维生素A。家庭获取自然食物来源与特定生物标志物相关。拥有菜园(baari)与视黄醇结合蛋白水平呈正相关,与炎症生物标志物呈负相关,而靠近池塘与铁蛋白水平呈正相关。
研究结果凸显了获取包括土著食物在内的多种自然食物资源对改善土著社区营养安全的作用。促进土著食物来源的营养与健康项目应纳入生物标志物评估,以进行有效监测和监督。