Vitamin A-fortified cooking oil reduces vitamin A deficiency in infants, young children and women: results from a programme evaluation in Indonesia. Issue 14 (16th January 2015)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Vitamin A-fortified cooking oil reduces vitamin A deficiency in infants, young children and women: results from a programme evaluation in Indonesia. Issue 14 (16th January 2015)
- Main Title:
- Vitamin A-fortified cooking oil reduces vitamin A deficiency in infants, young children and women: results from a programme evaluation in Indonesia
- Authors:
- Sandjaja,
Jus'at, Idrus
Jahari, Abas B
Ifrad,
Htet, Min Kyaw
Tilden, Robert L
Soekarjo, Damayanti
Utomo, Budi
Moench-Pfanner, Regina
Soekirman,
Korenromp, Eline L - Abstract:
- Abstract: Objective: To assess oil consumption, vitamin A intake and retinol status before and a year after the fortification of unbranded palm oil with retinyl palmitate. Design: Pre–post evaluation between two surveys. Setting: Twenty-four villages in West Java. Subjects: Poor households were randomly sampled. Serum retinol (adjusted for subclinical infection) was analysed in cross-sectional samples of lactating mothers (baseline n 324/endline n 349), their infants aged 6–11 months ( n 318/ n 335) and children aged 12–59 months ( n 469/477), and cohorts of children aged 5–9 years ( n 186) and women aged 15–29 years ( n 171), alongside food and oil consumption from dietary recall. Results: Fortified oil improved vitamin A intakes, contributing on average 26 %, 40 %, 38 %, 29 % and 35 % of the daily Recommended Nutrient Intake for children aged 12–23 months, 24–59 months, 5–9 years, lactating and non-lactating women, respectively. Serum retinol was 2–19 % higher at endline than baseline ( P <0·001 in infants aged 6–11 months, children aged 5–9 years, lactating and non-lactating women; non-significant in children aged 12–23 months; P =0·057 in children aged 24–59 months). Retinol in breast milk averaged 20·5 μg/dl at baseline and 32·5 μg/dl at endline ( P <0·01). Deficiency prevalence (serum retinol <20 μg/dl) was 6·5–18 % across groups at baseline, and 0·6–6 % at endline ( P ≤0·011). In multivariate regressions adjusting for socio-economic differences, vitamin A intake fromAbstract: Objective: To assess oil consumption, vitamin A intake and retinol status before and a year after the fortification of unbranded palm oil with retinyl palmitate. Design: Pre–post evaluation between two surveys. Setting: Twenty-four villages in West Java. Subjects: Poor households were randomly sampled. Serum retinol (adjusted for subclinical infection) was analysed in cross-sectional samples of lactating mothers (baseline n 324/endline n 349), their infants aged 6–11 months ( n 318/ n 335) and children aged 12–59 months ( n 469/477), and cohorts of children aged 5–9 years ( n 186) and women aged 15–29 years ( n 171), alongside food and oil consumption from dietary recall. Results: Fortified oil improved vitamin A intakes, contributing on average 26 %, 40 %, 38 %, 29 % and 35 % of the daily Recommended Nutrient Intake for children aged 12–23 months, 24–59 months, 5–9 years, lactating and non-lactating women, respectively. Serum retinol was 2–19 % higher at endline than baseline ( P <0·001 in infants aged 6–11 months, children aged 5–9 years, lactating and non-lactating women; non-significant in children aged 12–23 months; P =0·057 in children aged 24–59 months). Retinol in breast milk averaged 20·5 μg/dl at baseline and 32·5 μg/dl at endline ( P <0·01). Deficiency prevalence (serum retinol <20 μg/dl) was 6·5–18 % across groups at baseline, and 0·6–6 % at endline ( P ≤0·011). In multivariate regressions adjusting for socio-economic differences, vitamin A intake from fortified oil predicted improved retinol status for children aged 6–59 months ( P =0·003) and 5–9 years ( P =0·03). Conclusions: Although this evaluation without a comparison group cannot prove causality, retinyl contents in oil, Recommended Nutrient Intake contributions and relationships between vitamin intake and serum retinol provide strong plausibility of oil fortification impacting vitamin A status in Indonesian women and children. … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Public health nutrition. Volume 18:Issue 14(2015)
- Journal:
- Public health nutrition
- Issue:
- Volume 18:Issue 14(2015)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 18, Issue 14 (2015)
- Year:
- 2015
- Volume:
- 18
- Issue:
- 14
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2015-0018-0014-0000
- Page Start:
- 2511
- Page End:
- 2522
- Publication Date:
- 2015-01-16
- Subjects:
- Vitamin A, -- Food fortification, -- Impact evaluation, -- Children, -- Mothers
Nutrition -- Periodicals
Nutrition policy -- Periodicals
Public health -- Periodicals
613.2 - Journal URLs:
- http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayJournal?jid=PHN ↗
- DOI:
- 10.1017/S136898001400322X ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 1368-9800
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library STI - ELD Digital store
- Ingest File:
- 2486.xml