Niu Jizhao, Ockendon-Powell Nina Frances, Alonge Toluwanimi Ann, Papadaki Angeliki
School for Policy Studies, Faculty of Arts, Law and Social Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
School of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, United Kingdom.
Front Nutr. 2025 Sep 12;12:1651945. doi: 10.3389/fnut.2025.1651945. eCollection 2025.
Traditional diets are increasingly studied for their purported health and environmental benefits. Promoting the traditional African diet (TrAfDi) could be a promising means of addressing the impacts of rapid dietary transitions in African countries. However, there is no consistent definition of this traditional dietary pattern. The aim of this scoping review was therefore to systematically explore, for the first time, the definition of the TrAfDi, as reported in the literature to date.
Seven databases were searched, up to January 16, 2023, for peer-reviewed studies and gray literature describing the TrAfDi. One reviewer screened articles, extracted data, and assessed article quality; an independent reviewer screened 10% of titles, abstracts, and full-text articles. Reporting followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines.
We included 45 studies that defined a TrAfDi. The food groups characterizing the TrAfDi include cereals and their products, pulses, seeds and nuts and their products, and vegetables and their products. Other groups, cited less frequently, include fruits and their products, and roots, tubers, plantains, and their products. Maize was the most highly cited food item. Other, lesser-cited food items include cassava, cowpeas, fish, fruit, legumes, millet, and sorghum. Minor regional differences in the TrAfDi were observed when studies were segregated according to United Nations classifications. Differences were mainly observed between Western Africa and all other African regions, which, between them, do not appear to exhibit significant variation in the most frequently cited food groups. Few studies reported the quantities of foods consumed and the frequency of consumption.
These findings provide important initial evidence on what may constitute a TrAfDi and indicate features of its regional characteristics, and are relevant to the development of public health policies seeking to tackle challenges of food insecurity, obesity, and non-communicable diseases in Africa. These will underpin future research to assess the TrAfDi's health and environmental impact, and to understand the cultural implications of shifting dietary patterns resulting from climatic, economic, and other factors. Future studies should also aim to strengthen regional representativeness and establish the quantities of foods that characterize this dietary pattern.
传统饮食因其所谓的健康和环境益处而受到越来越多的研究。推广传统非洲饮食(TrAfDi)可能是应对非洲国家快速饮食转变影响的一种有前景的方式。然而,这种传统饮食模式并没有一致的定义。因此,本范围综述的目的是首次系统地探索迄今为止文献中报道的TrAfDi的定义。
检索了七个数据库,截至2023年1月16日,查找描述TrAfDi的同行评审研究和灰色文献。一名评审员筛选文章、提取数据并评估文章质量;一名独立评审员筛选了10%的标题、摘要和全文文章。报告遵循系统评价和范围综述的首选报告项目(PRISMA-ScR)指南。
我们纳入了45项定义TrAfDi的研究。构成TrAfDi的食物类别包括谷物及其制品、豆类、种子和坚果及其制品,以及蔬菜及其制品。其他较少提及的类别包括水果及其制品,以及根茎类、块茎类、大蕉及其制品。玉米是被提及最多的食物。其他较少被提及的食物包括木薯、豇豆、鱼、水果、豆类、小米和高粱。根据联合国分类对研究进行分类时,观察到TrAfDi存在微小的区域差异。差异主要出现在西非与所有其他非洲地区之间,而其他非洲地区之间在最常被提及的食物类别中似乎没有显著差异。很少有研究报告食物的食用量和食用频率。
这些发现为构成TrAfDi的因素提供了重要的初步证据,并指出了其区域特征,这与制定旨在应对非洲粮食不安全、肥胖和非传染性疾病挑战的公共卫生政策相关。这些将为未来评估TrAfDi的健康和环境影响以及理解气候、经济和其他因素导致的饮食模式转变的文化影响的研究奠定基础。未来的研究还应旨在加强区域代表性,并确定这种饮食模式的特征食物量。