Food supply chains and child and adolescent diets: A review



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https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S2211912420300973?token=F125245A3821F2C99998CFE7C285F7516538ED8028A1E1EB4BAAA8DFB9BAAC2A5F11AEA5AD7658AF077D6B6C235352FA&originRegion=eu-west-1&originCreation=20220202104831
DOI: 
10.1016/j.gfs.2020.100443
Proveedor: 
Licencia de recurso: 
Derechos sujetos al permiso del propietario
Tipo: 
Artículo de revista
Revista: 
Global Food Security
Páginas: 
100443
Volumen: 
27
Año: 
2020
Autor (es): 
Nordhagen S.
Editor (es): 
Descripción: 

This paper synthesizes literature on the relationship between food supply chains and children's and adolescents' diets and food accessibility. A scoping review was used to identify 47 original studies and seven review articles covering an additional 106 original studies. Studies were primarily cross-sectional and case studies, and most focused on younger children. Evidence was most extensive for production in food-producing households, suggesting modest positive associations and impacts. Few high-quality studies were found assessing linkages between overall food supply chains or mid-chain components (handling, storage, transport) and diets or food accessibility. Key research gaps identified include studies measuring impact along longer supply-chain pathways and a focus on children and adolescents as producers and consumers with their own agency.

Año de publicación: 
2020
Palabras clave: 
Food systems
children
adolescents
supply chains
value chains