Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland
Department of Population Health Sciences, School of Life Course & Population Sciences, Kings College London, London, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Jun 18;14(6):e080241. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-080241.
To determine the relationship between climate change, food systems and diet-related non-communicable diseases (DR-NCDs) in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) and propose a conceptual framework for food systems in SSA.
A scoping review.
Studies included investigated the relationship between climate change and related systemic risks, food systems, DR-NCDs and its risk factors in SSA. Studies focusing on the association between climate change and DR-NCDs unrelated to food systems, such as social inequalities, were excluded.
A comprehensive search was conducted in ProQuest (nine databases), Google Scholar and PubMed in December 2022.
Data extracted from studies included author, study type, country of study, climate change component, DR-NCD outcomes and risk factors, and impacts of climate change on DR-NCDs. A narrative approach was used to analyse the data. Based on the evidence gathered from SSA, we modified an existing food system conceptual framework.
The search retrieved 19 125 studies, 10 of which were included in the review. Most studies used a cross-sectional design (n=8). Four explored the influence of temperature on liver cancer through food storage while four explored the influence of temperature and rainfall on diabetes and obesity through food production. Cross-sectional evidence suggested that temperature is associated with liver cancer and rainfall with diabetes.
The review highlights the vulnerability of SSA's food systems to climate change-induced fluctuations, which in turn affect dietary patterns and DR-NCD outcomes. The evidence is scarce and concentrates mostly on the health effects of temperature through food storage. It proposes a conceptual framework to guide future research addressing climate change and DR-NCDs in SSA.
确定气候变化、食物系统与撒哈拉以南非洲(SSA)饮食相关非传染性疾病(DR-NCDs)之间的关系,并提出 SSA 食物系统的概念框架。
范围综述。
研究调查了气候变化与相关系统性风险、食物系统、SSA 的 DR-NCD 及其危险因素之间的关系。排除了重点研究气候变化与与食物系统无关的 DR-NCD 之间关联的研究,如社会不平等。
2022 年 12 月在 ProQuest(九个数据库)、Google Scholar 和 PubMed 进行了全面检索。
从研究中提取的数据包括作者、研究类型、研究国家、气候变化组成部分、DR-NCD 结果和危险因素,以及气候变化对 DR-NCD 的影响。采用叙述方法对数据进行分析。根据从 SSA 收集的证据,我们修改了现有的食物系统概念框架。
检索到 19125 项研究,其中 10 项被纳入综述。大多数研究采用横断面设计(n=8)。有 4 项研究探索了温度通过食物储存对肝癌的影响,有 4 项研究探索了温度和降雨量通过食物生产对糖尿病和肥胖的影响。横断面证据表明,温度与肝癌有关,降雨量与糖尿病有关。
该综述强调了 SSA 食物系统对气候变化引起的波动的脆弱性,这反过来又影响了饮食模式和 DR-NCD 结果。证据稀缺,主要集中在温度通过食物储存对健康的影响。它提出了一个概念框架,以指导未来研究解决 SSA 的气候变化和 DR-NCD 问题。