Temporal trends in apparent food consumption in Bangladesh : A joinpoint regression analysis of FAO’s food balance sheet data from 1961 to 2013 バングラデシュにおける実際の食料消費量の年次推移 : 1961–2013年までのFAO(国際連合食糧農業機関)のフードバランスシート(食料需給表)データによるジョインポイント回帰分析

Author

    • Al Hasan, Syed Mahfuz

Bibliographic Information

Title

Temporal trends in apparent food consumption in Bangladesh : A joinpoint regression analysis of FAO’s food balance sheet data from 1961 to 2013

Other Title

バングラデシュにおける実際の食料消費量の年次推移 : 1961–2013年までのFAO(国際連合食糧農業機関)のフードバランスシート(食料需給表)データによるジョインポイント回帰分析

Author

Al Hasan, Syed Mahfuz

University

香川大学

Types of degree

博士(医学)

Grant ID

甲第791号

Degree year

2022-03-24

Note and Description

We analyzed the temporal trends and significant changes in apparent food consumption or availabilityin Bangladesh from 1961 to 2013. Due to the lack of a long-term national dietary intake dataset, this study used data derived from the FAO’s food balance sheets. We used joinpoint regression analysis to identify significant changes in the temporal trends. The annual percent change (APC) was computed for each segment of the trends. Apparent intake of starchy roots, eggs, fish, vegetables, milk, and vegetable oils significantly has increased (p < 0.05) in the Bangladeshi diet since 1961; whereas cereals changed by merely 4.65%. Bangladesh has been experiencing three structural changes in their dietary history after the Liberation War, though the intake level has been grossly inadequate. Initially, since the late-1970s, apparent vegetable oils intake increased at a market rate (APC = 7.53). Subsequently, since the early-1990s, the real force behind the structural change in the diet has been the increasing trends in the apparent intake of fish (APC = 5.05), eggs (APC = 4.65), and meat (APC = 1.54). Lastly, since the early 2000s, apparent intakes of fruits (APC = 20.44), vegetables (APC = 10.58), and milk (APC = 3.55) increased significantly (p <0.05). This study result reveals and quantifies the significant secular changes in the dietary history of Bangladesh from 1961 to 2013. Bangladesh has experienced inadequate but significant structural changes in the diet in the late-1970s, early-1990s, and early-2000s. Overabundance of cereals and inadequate structural changes in the diet may have caused the increasing prevalence of overweightness and emergence of diet-related, non-communicable diseases in Bangladesh.

25access

Codes

  • NII Article ID (NAID)
    500001492972
  • NII Author ID (NRID)
    • 8000001966527
  • DOI
  • Text Lang
    • eng
  • Source
    • Institutional Repository
    • NDL Digital Collections
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