Food sources of key nutrients, meal and dietary patterns among children aged 4–13 years in Ibadan, Nigeria: findings from the 2019 Kids nutrition and health study
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Date
2022
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
MDPI AG (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)
Abstract
This study examined the contribution of food to nutrient intake, meal and dietary patterns
among children aged 4–8 and 9–13 years in the city of Ibadan, Nigeria. Multi-pass 24-hour dietary
recalls were used to assess intakes. Prudent and traditional Southwestern Nigerian dietary patterns
were identified among children. The top foods and beverages were defined by frequency and
amount consumed. Meal patterns were described by the eating occasions, while cluster analysis
probed dietary patterns. About 88% of children had at least three meals including breakfast (95%),
lunch (85%), dinner (92%) and midmorning meals (48%), while about 60% ate snacks at least once
daily. Sources of energy and key nutrients were limited (yam, cassava, rice, maize, bread and
beans/peas/legumes). The amount consumed per consumer of cassava products (192.2, 256.0 g),
yam (169.7, 256.0 g), legumes (115.3, 150.7 g), corn/maize (160.4, 195.2), and rice (138.4, 182.3 g) were
high, while beef (15.2, 17.9 g), eggs (50.6, 49.2 g), fish (27.5, 30.6 g), milk (24.2, 27.0 g) and nuts and
seeds (18.2, 19.7 g) were low for children ages 4–8 and 9–13 years, respectively. In conclusion, while
the frequency of meals suggests a healthy pattern, the top foods could not provide adequate nutrient
(especially micronutrient) intake, which is key to the development of the target population.
Description
Keywords
eating occasions, dietary patterns, food sources, nutrients, children 4–13 years, child nutrition, Nigeria
