Inland fisheries critical for the diet quality of young children in sub-Saharan Africa



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https://reader.elsevier.com/reader/sd/pii/S221191242030136X?token=813DDFEDAE24DBBF83BC575FB3180C263B93B9834D8245ED05AE07933DEE8A09A1AFD55619AC6D27E23492BDE8EB49A2&originRegion=eu-west-1&originCreation=20220104111455
DOI: 
10.1016/j.gfs.2020.100483
ISSN: 
2211-9124
Provider: 
Licence de la ressource: 
Droits soumis à la permission du propriétaire
Type: 
Article de journal
Journal: 
Global Food Security
Nombre: 
100483
Pages: 
n/a
Volume: 
28
Année: 
2021
Auteur: 
O'Meara L.
Cohen P. J.
Simmance F.
Marinda P.
Nagoli J.
Teoh S. J.
Funge-Smith S.
Mills D. J.
Thilsted S. H.
Byrd K. A.
Editeur(s): 
Description: 

Animal-source foods (ASF), such as fish, provide a critical source of nutrients for dietary quality and optimal growth of children. In sub-Saharan Africa, children often consume monotonous cereal-based diets, a key determinate of malnutrition such as stunting. Identifying existing sources of ASF for children’s diets will inform the development of nutritious food systems for vulnerable groups. Here we adopt a food systems framework (sensu HLPE, 2017) to examine links between aquatic- and terrestrial-based ASF sources with ASF consumption and dietary diversity in rural children aged 6-23 months in sub-Saharan Africa. Employing a novel approach, we merged existing geo-tagged nationally-representative datasets, including Demographic and Health Surveys for Malawi (2015-16, n=3995) and Zambia (2013-14, n=2333) with spatial data on proximity to inland fisheries (waterbodies ≥0.1km2) and formal markets. We found that children living closer to inland fisheries were more likely to consume fish and aquatic-based ASF, and exhibit higher dietary diversity. Children did not always consume more ASF if they lived were closer to a formal market or in a house that owned livestock. We found that inland fisheries are one of the most important sources of ASF for rural children in sub-Saharan Africa. We also demonstrate that secondary datasets provide a useful methodology for understanding the role of food systems for diets. As food systems transition, it is important that policy and programs preserve components of the existing food system – namely inland fisheries - to ensure the ongoing provision of nutrient-dense fish and aquatic-based ASF for the dietary quality of infants and young children.

Αnnée de publication: 
2021
Μots-clés: 
Diets
dietary diversity
nutrition
food fish
fish and aquatic foods
animal-source foods
low income groups
food supply chains