AI Article Synopsis

  • The government of Bangladesh has aimed to improve dietary diversity and nutrition since 1971 through various policies.
  • The study examined factors influencing dietary changes over time, specifically how agriculture and economic development impacted these shifts.
  • Results showed that while adherence to more modern dietary patterns increased, traditional diets declined; economic growth was a major driver for these changes, highlighting the importance of diverse agriculture and poverty reduction for future dietary improvements.

Article Abstract

Background: The government of Bangladesh has implemented multiple policies since 1971 to provide the population with more diverse and nutritious diets.

Objective: The aim of this study was to examine the drivers of dietary change over time and the roles agriculture and economic development have played.

Methods: We used principal component analysis to derive dietary patterns from 7 cross-sectional rounds of the Bangladesh Household [Income and] Expenditure Survey. We then used linear probability models to estimate associations of adherence to dietary patterns with socio-economic characteristics of households, and with agricultural production on the household and regional level. For dietary patterns that increased or decreased over time, Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition was used to assess factors associated with these changes.

Results: Seven dietary patterns were identified: modern, traditional, festival, winter, summer, monotonous, and spices. All diets were present in all survey rounds. In 1985, over 40% of households had diets not associated with any identified pattern, which declined to 12% by 2010. The proportion of the population in households adhering to the modern, winter, summer, and monotonous diets increased over time, whereas the proportion adhering to the traditional diet decreased. Although many factors were associated with adherence to dietary patterns in the pooled sample, changes in observed factors only explained a limited proportion of change over time due to variation in coefficients between periods. Increased real per capita expenditure was the largest driver of elevated adherence to dietary patterns over time, whereas changes in the agricultural system increased adherence to less diverse dietary patterns.

Conclusions: These findings highlight the need for both diversified agricultural production and a continued reduction in poverty in order to drive dietary improvement. This study lays the groundwork for further analysis of the impact of changing diets on health and nutrition.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6459985PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cdn/nzy091DOI Listing

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