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Global, regional, and national consumption of animal-source foods between 1990 and 2018 : findings from the Global Dietary Database

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dc.contributor University of Iceland
dc.contributor.author Global Dietary Database
dc.date.accessioned 2022-12-21T01:04:43Z
dc.date.available 2022-12-21T01:04:43Z
dc.date.issued 2022-03
dc.identifier.citation Global Dietary Database 2022 , ' Global, regional, and national consumption of animal-source foods between 1990 and 2018 : findings from the Global Dietary Database ' , The Lancet Planetary Health , vol. 6 , no. 3 , pp. e243-e256 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00352-1
dc.identifier.issn 2542-5196
dc.identifier.other 64935840
dc.identifier.other 7acd7248-32e3-4ea8-b3ef-7e8fda4cbfe5
dc.identifier.other 85125831652
dc.identifier.other 35278390
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11815/3738
dc.description Funding Information: The investigators did not receive funding from a pharmaceutical company or other agency to write this report. JR, JZ, and PS report research funding from Nestlé, outside the submitted work. JC reports research funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, outside the submitted work. RM reports grants from US National Institutes of Health, Nestlé, and Danone, and personal fees from Bunge, Development Initiatives, outside the submitted work. PW reports research grants and contracts from the US Agency for International Development and personal fees from the Global Panel on Agriculture and Food Systems for Nutrition, outside the submitted work. DM reports research funding from the US National Institutes of Health and the Gates Foundation; personal fees from GOED, Bunge, Indigo Agriculture, Motif FoodWorks, Amarin, Acasti Pharma, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, America's Test Kitchen, and Danone; scientific advisory board member for Brightseed, DayTwo, Elysium Health, Filtricine, HumanCo, and Tiny Organics; and chapter royalties from UpToDate, all outside the submitted work. All other authors declare no competing interests. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license
dc.description.abstract Background: Diet is a major modifiable risk factor for human health and overall consumption patterns affect planetary health. We aimed to quantify global, regional, and national consumption levels of animal-source foods (ASF) to inform intervention, surveillance, and policy priorities. Methods: Individual-level dietary surveys across 185 countries conducted between 1990 and 2018 were identified, obtained, standardised, and assessed among children and adults, jointly stratified by age, sex, education level, and rural versus urban residence. We included 499 discrete surveys (91·2% nationally or subnationally representative) with data for ASF (unprocessed red meat, processed meat, eggs, seafood, milk, cheese, and yoghurt), comprising 3·8 million individuals from 134 countries representing 95·2% of the world population in 2018. We used Bayesian hierarchical models to account for differences in survey methods and representativeness, time trends, and input data and modelling uncertainty, with five-fold cross-validation. Findings: In 2018, mean global intake per person of unprocessed red meat was 51 g/day (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 48–54; region-specific range 7–114 g/day); 17 countries (23·9% of the world's population) had mean intakes of at least one serving (100 g) per day. Global mean intake of processed meat was 17 g/day (95% UI 15–21 g/day; region-specific range 3–54 g/day); seafood, 28 g/day (27–30 g/day; 12–44 g/day); eggs, 21 g/day (18–24 g/day; 6–35 g/day); milk 88 g/day (84–93 g/day; 45–185 g/day); cheese, 8 g/day (8–10 g/day; 1–34 g/day); and yoghurt, 20 g/day (17–23 g/day; 7–84 g/day). Mean national intakes were at least one serving per day for processed meat (≥50 g/day) in countries representing 6·9% of the global population; for cheese (≥42 g/day) in 2·3%; for eggs (≥55 g/day) in 0·7%; for milk (≥245 g/day) in 0·3%; for seafood (≥100 g/day) in 0·8%; and for yoghurt (≥245 g/day) in less than 0·1%. Among the 25 most populous countries in 2018, total ASF intake was highest in Russia (5·8 servings per day), Germany (3·8 servings per day), and the UK (3·7 servings per day), and lowest in Tanzania (0·9 servings per day) and India (0·7 servings per day). Global and regional intakes of ASF were generally similar by sex. Compared with children, adults generally consumed more unprocessed red meat, seafood and cheese, and less milk; energy-adjusted intakes of other ASF were more similar. Globally, ASF intakes (servings per week) were higher among more-educated versus less-educated adults, with greatest global differences for milk (0·79), eggs (0·47), unprocessed red meat (0·42), cheese (0·28), seafood (0·28), yoghurt (0·22), and processed meat (0·21). This was also true for urban compared to rural areas, with largest global differences (servings per week) for unprocessed red meat (0·47), milk (0·38), and eggs (0·20). Between 1990 and 2018, global intakes (servings per week) increased for unprocessed red meat (1·20), eggs (1·18), milk (0·63), processed meat (0·50), seafood (0·44), and cheese (0·14). Interpretation: Our estimates of ASF consumption identify populations with both lower and higher than optimal intakes. These estimates can inform the targeting of intervention, surveillance, and policy priorities relevant to both human and planetary health. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and American Heart Association.
dc.format.extent 1739964
dc.format.extent e243-e256
dc.language.iso en
dc.relation.ispartofseries The Lancet Planetary Health; 6(3)
dc.rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subject Animals
dc.subject Bayes Theorem
dc.subject Dairy Products
dc.subject Diet
dc.subject Eggs
dc.subject Global Health
dc.subject Humans
dc.subject Meat
dc.title Global, regional, and national consumption of animal-source foods between 1990 and 2018 : findings from the Global Dietary Database
dc.type /dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontojournal/article
dc.description.version Peer reviewed
dc.identifier.doi 10.1016/S2542-5196(21)00352-1
dc.relation.url http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85125831652&partnerID=8YFLogxK
dc.contributor.department Faculty of Food Science and Nutrition
dc.contributor.department Other departments
dc.contributor.school Health Sciences


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