Global Coverage of Mandatory Large-Scale Food Fortification Programs: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Food fortification with micronutrients is widely implemented to reduce micronutrient deficiencies and related outcomes. Although many factors affect the success of fortification programs, high population coverage is needed to have a public health impact. We aimed to provide recent global coverage es...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advances in nutrition (Bethesda, Md.) Md.), 2023-09, Vol.14 (5), p.1197-1210
Hauptverfasser: Rohner, Fabian, Wirth, James P., Zeng, Wu, Petry, Nicolai, Donkor, William E.S., Neufeld, Lynnette M., Mkambula, Penjani, Groll, Sydney, Mbuya, Mduduzi NN, Friesen, Valerie M.
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container_issue 5
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container_title Advances in nutrition (Bethesda, Md.)
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creator Rohner, Fabian
Wirth, James P.
Zeng, Wu
Petry, Nicolai
Donkor, William E.S.
Neufeld, Lynnette M.
Mkambula, Penjani
Groll, Sydney
Mbuya, Mduduzi NN
Friesen, Valerie M.
description Food fortification with micronutrients is widely implemented to reduce micronutrient deficiencies and related outcomes. Although many factors affect the success of fortification programs, high population coverage is needed to have a public health impact. We aimed to provide recent global coverage estimates of salt, wheat flour, vegetable oil, maize flour, rice, and sugar among countries with mandatory fortification legislation. The indicators were the proportion of households consuming the: food, fortifiable food (that is, industrially processed), fortified food (to any extent), and adequately fortified food (according to national or international standards). We estimated the number of individuals reached with fortified foods. We systematically retrieved and reviewed all applicable evidence from: published reports and articles from January 2010 to August 2021, survey lists/databases from key organizations, and reports/literature received from key informants. We analyzed data with R statistical package using random-effects meta-analysis models. An estimated 94.4% of households consumed salt, 78.4% consumed fortified salt (4.2 billion people), and 48.6% consumed adequately fortified salt in 64, 84, and 31 countries, respectively. Additionally, 77.4% of households consumed wheat flour, 61.6% consumed fortifiable wheat flour, and 47.1% consumed fortified wheat flour (66.2 million people) in 15, 8, and 10 countries, respectively, and 87.0% consumed vegetable oil, 86.7% consumed fortifiable oil, and 40.1% consumed fortified oil (123.9 million people) in 10, 7, and 5 countries, respectively. Data on adequately fortified wheat flour and vegetable oil and coverage indicators for maize flour, rice, and sugar were limited. There are major data gaps on fortification coverage for most foods except salt. All countries with mandatory fortification programs should generate and use more coverage data to assess program performance and adjust programs as needed to realize their potential to reduce micronutrient deficiencies (PROSPERO CRD42021269364).
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subjects coverage
fortification
maize
Review
rice
salt
sugar
vegetable oil
wheat flour
title Global Coverage of Mandatory Large-Scale Food Fortification Programs: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
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