Publications by authors named "Matilda Steiner Asiedu"

We have developed a population-level method for dietary assessment using low-cost wearable cameras. Our approach, EgoDiet, employs an egocentric vision-based pipeline to learn portion sizes, addressing the shortcomings of traditional self-reported dietary methods. To evaluate the functionality of this method, field studies were conducted in London (Study A) and Ghana (Study B) among populations of Ghanaian and Kenyan origin.

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  • Shared plate eating (SPE) is a prevalent practice in many Low- and Middle-Income Countries, like Ghana, but has been understudied, leading to challenges in accurately assessing dietary habits in these contexts.
  • The study aimed to explore the frequency of SPE versus individual plate eating among family members in both rural and urban households using a wearable camera to capture food consumption directly.
  • Results showed a significant difference, with rural households engaging in SPE 96.7% of the time compared to 36.7% in urban households, highlighting the importance of modern methods like wearable cameras for better data on dietary practices.
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  • - Folic acid is essential for DNA synthesis, especially during reproduction, with significant roles in reducing congenital anomalies and supporting the health of pregnant and lactating women.
  • - A study in Dodowa, Ghana, surveyed 388 women on their knowledge and use of folic acid, finding that while awareness was high (68.3%), most had low knowledge about its supplementation and 75% hadn't used folic acid supplements recently.
  • - The results indicate a gap between awareness and practical knowledge of folic acid supplementation, suggesting a need for better education among pregnant and lactating women to improve their health outcomes.
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Scope: Legumes consumption has been proven to promote health across the lifespan; cowpeas have demonstrated efficacy in combating childhood malnutrition and growth faltering, with an estimated malnutrition prevalence of 35.6% of children in Ghana. This cowpea feeding study aimed to identify a suite of metabolic consumption biomarkers in children and adults.

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Introduction: Dietary assessment is important for understanding nutritional status. Traditional methods of monitoring food intake through self-report such as diet diaries, 24-hour dietary recall, and food frequency questionnaires may be subject to errors and can be time-consuming for the user.

Methods: This paper presents a semi-automatic dietary assessment tool we developed - a desktop application called Image to Nutrients (I2N) - to process sensor-detected eating events and images captured during these eating events by a wearable sensor.

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  • Study Purpose
  • : The research aimed to assess whether two types of ready-to-use food (Peanut/Milk RUF and Peanut/Cowpea RUF) could enhance childhood cognition compared to a traditional millet porridge after one year of school feeding in Ghana.
  • Methodology Overview
  • : Conducted as a controlled clinical trial involving 871 children aged 5-12 years across 6 schools. Participants were assigned to receive different food types, and their cognitive abilities were evaluated using four specific tests to measure fluid cognition.
  • Findings Summary
  • : While the Peanut/Milk RUF group showed improvements in certain cognitive test scores, the Peanut/Cowpea RUF group did not show any significant benefits
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Green leafy vegetables (such as cocoyam ( spp) leaves, spinach ( spp), amaranths ( spp), roselle leaves ( spp), and lettuce ( spp)) form a major part of Ghanaian meals providing essential vitamin such as A, B and C and minerals including iron and calcium as well as essential bioactive compounds. However, the practices involved in the production, distribution and handling of these nutrient rich vegetables, by most value chain actors in Ghana, unfortunately pre-dispose them to contamination with pathogens, heavy metals and pesticides residues. These have therefore raised public health concerns regarding the safety and quality of these green leafy vegetables.

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Unlabelled: Small fish are an important part of the diet in Ghana, but malnutrition rates remain high. The nutritional quality of fish consumed in Ghana may be affected by food processing and cooking practices, but the extent to which these processes are practiced among poor Ghanaian households along the coastal belt is unknown. This study explored how poor Ghanaian households process, prepare, and cook meals containing small fish.

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Camera-based passive dietary intake monitoring is able to continuously capture the eating episodes of a subject, recording rich visual information, such as the type and volume of food being consumed, as well as the eating behaviors of the subject. However, there currently is no method that is able to incorporate these visual clues and provide a comprehensive context of dietary intake from passive recording (e.g.

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Background: Due to its severe adverse effect on child mortality, sickle cell disease (SCD) has been identified as a set of diseases of public health concern. The high mortality rate among children with SCD in Africa has been attributed to several factors including sub-optimal management and care. This study documented the nutrition-related knowledge and practices of caregivers of teenagers who suffer from sickle cell disease (SCD) to inform decisions on integrated management of the disease.

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Objective: Passive, wearable sensors can be used to obtain objective information in infant feeding, but their use has not been tested. Our objective was to compare assessment of infant feeding (frequency, duration and cues) by self-report and that of the Automatic Ingestion Monitor-2 (AIM-2).

Design: A cross-sectional pilot study was conducted in Ghana.

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Overweight/obesity (OWOB) often co-occurs with anemia or micronutrient deficiencies (MNDs) among women of reproductive age (WRA) in Ghana; identifying the risk factors of these conditions is essential for prevention. We aimed to examine the prevalence of OWOB, anemia, and MNDs and their co-occurrence and risk factors among non-pregnant women 15-49 years of age in Ghana. Data were from a 2017 two-stage national survey of 1063 women.

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Knowing the amounts of energy and nutrients in an individual's diet is important for maintaining health and preventing chronic diseases. As electronic and AI technologies advance rapidly, dietary assessment can now be performed using food images obtained from a smartphone or a wearable device. One of the challenges in this approach is to computationally measure the volume of food in a bowl from an image.

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  • Iron deficiency anemia is a common issue among infants in Ghana, prompting this study to assess the impact of micronutrient-fortified infant cereal on their nutritional status.
  • A double-blind, controlled trial with infants aged 6-18 months showed that those consuming iron-fortified cereal had a significantly greater increase in hemoglobin levels and a larger reduction in anemia prevalence compared to those who did not receive the fortified cereal.
  • Despite the positive effects on anemia, there was no significant difference in weight or height gain between the two groups over the study period, highlighting the need for ongoing efforts to address malnutrition in developing countries.
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Obesity is a major global health challenge and a risk factor for the leading causes of death, including heart disease, stroke, diabetes, and several types of cancer. Attempts to manage and regulate obesity have led to the implementation of various dietary regulatory initiatives to provide information on the calorie contents of meals. Although knowledge of the calorie content is useful for meal planning, it is not sufficient as other factors, including health status (diabetes, hypertension, etc.

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Malnutrition, including both undernutrition and obesity, is a significant problem in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). In order to study malnutrition and develop effective intervention strategies, it is crucial to evaluate nutritional status in LMICs at the individual, household, and community levels. In a multinational research project supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, we have been using a wearable technology to conduct objective dietary assessment in sub-Saharan Africa.

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Background: Sickle cell disease (SCD) is an inherited blood disorder that predominantly affects individuals in sub-Saharan Africa. However, research that elucidates links between SCD pathophysiology and nutritional status in African patients is lacking. This systematic review aimed to assess the landscape of studies in sub-Saharan Africa that focused on nutritional aspects of SCD, and highlights gaps in knowledge that could inform priority-setting for future research.

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Biofortified yellow-fleshed cassava is important in countries with high cassava consumption, to improve the vitamin A status of their populations. Yellow- and white-fleshed cassava were evaluated over three locations for proximate composition and cyanide content as well as retention of carotenoids after boiling. There was significant variation in the crude fiber, fat, protein and ash content of the genotypes.

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The triple burden of malnutrition is an incessant issue in low- and middle-income countries, and fish has the potential to mitigate this burden. In Ghana fish is a central part of the diet, but data on nutrients and contaminants in processed indigenous fish species, that are often eaten whole, are missing. Samples of smoked, dried or salted Engraulis encrasicolus (European anchovy), Brachydeuterus auritus (bigeye grunt), Sardinella aurita (round sardinella), Selene dorsalis (African moonfish), Sierrathrissa leonensis (West African (WA) pygmy herring) and Tilapia spp.

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Anaemia has serious effects on human health and has multifactorial aetiologies. This study aimed to determine putative risk factors for anaemia in children 6-59 months and 15- to 49-year-old non-pregnant women living in Ghana. Data from a nationally representative cross-sectional survey were analysed for associations between anaemia and various anaemia risk factors.

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  • Malnutrition is a significant issue in low- and middle-income countries, but accurate assessments of nutritional deficiencies are lacking.
  • This study aims to create and validate a new method using wearable cameras to automatically capture food intake images from household members in Ghana and Uganda.
  • The captured images will help objectively estimate food and nutrient intake—like protein and fat—providing better insights into nutritional status and potentially addressing malnutrition challenges in these regions.
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Nationally representative data on the micronutrient status of Ghanaian women and children are very scarce. We aimed to document the current national prevalence of micronutrient deficiencies, anemia, malaria, inflammation, α-thalassemia, sickle cell disease and trait, and under- and over-nutrition in Ghana. In 2017, a two-stage cross-sectional design was applied to enroll pre-school children (6-59 months) and non-pregnant women (15-49 years) from three strata in Ghana: Northern, Middle and Southern Belt.

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Background: Only 20% of children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) have access to ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF), and RUTF cost limits its accessibility.

Methods: This randomized, double-blind controlled study involved a clinical equivalence trial comparing the effectiveness of an alternative RUTF with standard RUTF in the home-based treatment of uncomplicated SAM and moderate malnutrition in Ghanaian children aged 6 to 59 months. The primary outcome was recovery, equivalence was defined as being within 5 percentage points of the control group, and an intention-to-treat analysis was used.

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Background And Aim: There is a need to investigate the long-term impact of successful weight loss maintenance on blood lipids and glucose concentrations in populations within Africa, where obesity and cardiovascular disease (CVD) rates are increasingly becoming a public health threat. The aim of this study was to compare the serum lipid and glucose concentrations of successful and unsuccessful weight loss maintainers who previously participated in the Nutriline Weight Loss Programme (NWLP) in Accra, Ghana.

Methods: 112 participants were randomly selected to participate in this cross-sectional study.

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Complementary foods that are deficient in both macronutrients and micronutrients coupled with a high burden of infections during the complementary feeding period are major underlying causes of child malnutrition in developing countries. Among the recent efforts to combat malnutrition by improving the quality of complementary foods in the developing world is the use of leaf powder (MLP) as a food fortificant. We conducted a randomized controlled trial to test the effect of feeding MLP-fortified complementary food on hemoglobin concentration and growth of infants and young children after 4 months of feeding.

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