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    Global, regional, and national consumption of animal-source foods between 1990 and 2018: findings from the Global Dietary Database

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    MillerWebbetal.2022ASFintakeinGBDLancetPlanetHealth.pdf (1.659Mb)
    Date
    2022-03-01
    Author
    Miller, Victoria
    Reedy, Julia
    Cudhea, Frederick
    Zhang, Jianyi
    Shi, Peilin
    Erndt-Marino, Josh
    Coates, Jennifer
    Micha, Renata
    Webb, Patrick
    Mozaffarian, Dariush
    Abbott, Pamela
    Abdollahi, Morteza
    Abedi, Parvin
    Abumweis, Suhad
    Adair, Linda
    Al Nsour, Mohannad
    Al-Daghri, Nasser
    Al-Hamad, Nawal
    Al-Hooti, Suad
    Al-Zenki, Sameer
    Alam, Iftikhar
    Ali, Jemal H.
    Alissa, Eman
    Anderson, Simon
    Anzid, Karim
    Arambepola, Carukshi
    Arici, Mustafa
    Arsenault, Joanne
    Asciak, Renzo
    Barbieri, Helene E.
    Barengo, Noël
    Barquera, Simon
    Bas, Murat
    Becker, Wulf
    Beer-Borst, Sigrid
    Bergman, Per
    Biró, Lajos
    Boindala, Sesikeran
    Bovet, Pascal
    Bradshaw, Debbie
    Bukhary, Noriklil BI
    Bundhamcharoen, Kanitta
    Caballero, Mauricio
    Calleja, Neville
    Cao, Xia
    Capanzana, Mario
    Carmikle, Jan
    Castetbon, Katia
    Castro, Michelle
    Cerdena, Corazon
    Chang, Hsing Yi
    Charlton, Karen
    Chen, Yu
    Chen, Mei F.
    Chiplonkar, Shashi
    Cho, Yoonsu
    Chuah, Khun Aik
    Costanzo, Simona
    Cowan, Melanie
    Damasceno, Albertino
    Dastgiri, Saeed
    De Henauw, Stefaan
    DeRidder, Karin
    Ding, Eric
    Dommarco, Rivera
    Don, Rokiah
    Duante, Charmaine
    Duleva, Vesselka
    Duran Aguero, Samuel
    Ekbote, Veena
    El Ati, Jalila
    El Hamdouchi, Asmaa
    El-kour, Tatyana
    Eldridge, Alison
    Elmadfa, Ibrahim
    Esteghamati, Alireza
    Etemad, Zohreh
    Fadzil, Fariza
    Farzadfar, Farshad
    Fernandez, Anne
    Fernando, Dulitha
    Fisberg, Regina
    Forsyth, Simon
    Gamboa-Delgado, Edna
    Garriguet, Didier
    Gaspoz, Jean Michel
    Gauci, Dorothy
    Geleijnse, Marianne
    Ginnela, Brahmam
    Grosso, Giuseppe
    Guessous, Idris
    Gulliford, Martin
    Gunnarsdottir, Ingibjorg
    Hadden, Wilbur
    Hadziomeragic, Aida
    Haerpfer, Christian
    Hakeem, Rubina
    Haque, Aminul
    Hashemian, Maryam
    Hemalatha, Rajkumar
    ...show more authors ...show less authors
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    Abstract
    Background: Diet is a major modifiable risk factor for human health and overall consumption patterns affect planetary health. We aimed to quantify global, regional, and national consumption levels of animal-source foods (ASF) to inform intervention, surveillance, and policy priorities. Methods: Individual-level dietary surveys across 185 countries conducted between 1990 and 2018 were identified, obtained, standardised, and assessed among children and adults, jointly stratified by age, sex, education level, and rural versus urban residence. We included 499 discrete surveys (91·2% nationally or subnationally representative) with data for ASF (unprocessed red meat, processed meat, eggs, seafood, milk, cheese, and yoghurt), comprising 3·8 million individuals from 134 countries representing 95·2% of the world population in 2018. We used Bayesian hierarchical models to account for differences in survey methods and representativeness, time trends, and input data and modelling uncertainty, with five-fold cross-validation. Findings: In 2018, mean global intake per person of unprocessed red meat was 51 g/day (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 48–54; region-specific range 7–114 g/day); 17 countries (23·9% of the world's population) had mean intakes of at least one serving (100 g) per day. Global mean intake of processed meat was 17 g/day (95% UI 15–21 g/day; region-specific range 3–54 g/day); seafood, 28 g/day (27–30 g/day; 12–44 g/day); eggs, 21 g/day (18–24 g/day; 6–35 g/day); milk 88 g/day (84–93 g/day; 45–185 g/day); cheese, 8 g/day (8–10 g/day; 1–34 g/day); and yoghurt, 20 g/day (17–23 g/day; 7–84 g/day). Mean national intakes were at least one serving per day for processed meat (≥50 g/day) in countries representing 6·9% of the global population; for cheese (≥42 g/day) in 2·3%; for eggs (≥55 g/day) in 0·7%; for milk (≥245 g/day) in 0·3%; for seafood (≥100 g/day) in 0·8%; and for yoghurt (≥245 g/day) in less than 0·1%. Among the 25 most populous countries in 2018, total ASF intake was highest in Russia (5·8 servings per day), Germany (3·8 servings per day), and the UK (3·7 servings per day), and lowest in Tanzania (0·9 servings per day) and India (0·7 servings per day). Global and regional intakes of ASF were generally similar by sex. Compared with children, adults generally consumed more unprocessed red meat, seafood and cheese, and less milk; energy-adjusted intakes of other ASF were more similar. Globally, ASF intakes (servings per week) were higher among more-educated versus less-educated adults, with greatest global differences for milk (0·79), eggs (0·47), unprocessed red meat (0·42), cheese (0·28), seafood (0·28), yoghurt (0·22), and processed meat (0·21). This was also true for urban compared to rural areas, with largest global differences (servings per week) for unprocessed red meat (0·47), milk (0·38), and eggs (0·20). Between 1990 and 2018, global intakes (servings per week) increased for unprocessed red meat (1·20), eggs (1·18), milk (0·63), processed meat (0·50), seafood (0·44), and cheese (0·14). Interpretation: Our estimates of ASF consumption identify populations with both lower and higher than optimal intakes. These estimates can inform the targeting of intervention, surveillance, and policy priorities relevant to both human and planetary health. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and American Heart Association.
    URI
    https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85125831652&origin=inward
    DOI/handle
    http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00352-1
    http://hdl.handle.net/10576/31607
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