| Literature DB >> 27447925 |
James P Wirth1, Magali Leyvraz2, Prahlad R Sodani3, Grant J Aaron2, Narottam D Sharma3, Bradley A Woodruff1.
Abstract
Food fortification is a cost-effective approach to prevent and control of micronutrient deficiencies in India. A cross-sectional survey of children 0-35 months of age residing in the catchment areas of anganwadi centers in the state of Telangana was conducted to assess the coverage of adequately iodized salt and the potential for rice fortification. Salt samples were collected and tested for iodine concentration using iodometric titration. Information on demographics, household rice consumption, and Telangana's rice sector was collected and interpreted. In households of selected children, 79% of salt samples were found to be adequately iodized. Salt brand and district were significant predictors of inadequately iodized salt. Daily rice consumption among children and women averaged 122 grams and 321 grams per day, respectively. Approximately 28% of households reported consuming rice produced themselves or purchased from a local farmer, 65% purchased rice from a market or shop, 6% got rice from a public distribution system site, and 2% obtained it from a rice mill. In the catchment areas of Telangana's anganwadi centers, there is significant variation in the coverage of adequately iodized salt by district. Future surveys in Telangana should measure the coverage of salt iodization in the general population using quantitative methods. Nonetheless, increasing the adequacy of iodization of smaller salt manufacturers would help achieve universal salt iodization in Telangana. Despite high consumption of rice, our findings suggest that large-scale market-based rice fortification is not feasible in Telangana due to a large proportion of households producing their own rice and highly fragmented rice distribution. Distributing fortified rice via Telangana's public distribution system may be a viable approach to target low-income households, but would only reach a small proportion of the population in Telangana.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27447925 PMCID: PMC4957802 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158554
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Percentage of Adequately Iodized Salt (≥15 ppm Iodine Concentration) in Households of Selected Children (N = 1068) in Selected AWC Catchment Areas in Telangana, India, 2014.
| Characteristic | n | % | (95% CI) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban | 470 | 87.8 | (82.6, 91.6) | <0.05 |
| Rural/Tribal | 400 | 77.0 | (69.0, 83.5) | |
| Poor | 128 | 66.2 | (53.4, 77.0) | <0.01 |
| Non-poor | 712 | 82.7 | (76.2, 87.7) | |
| 0–4 | 217 | 71.2 | (59.1, 80.9) | <0.01 |
| ≥5 | 653 | 83.7 | (78.7, 87.6) | |
| Adilabad | 127 | 84.5 | (75.9, 90.4) | <0.01 |
| Hyderabad | 104 | 92.3 | (83.0, 96.7) | |
| Karimnagar | 88 | 90.5 | (78.5, 96.1) | |
| Khammam | 132 | 82.5 | (63.2, 92.8) | |
| Mahbubnagar | 106 | 65.5 | (45.9, 81.0) | |
| Medak | 38 | 94.1 | (89.6, 96.8) | |
| Nalgonda | 79 | 78.5 | (65.3, 87.7) | |
| Nizamabad | 33 | 59.0 | (39.9, 75.8) | |
| Ranga Reddy | 61 | 70.1 | (32.7, 91.9) | |
| Warangal | 102 | 71.9 | (62.7, 79.6) | |
| Major brand 1 | 129 | 92.0 | (83.9, 96.2) | <0.001 |
| Major brand 2 | 77 | 94.6 | (88.1, 97.7) | |
| Major brand 3 | 80 | 82.0 | (64.6, 91.9) | |
| Major brand 4 | 62 | 100.0 | – | |
| Major brand 5 | 43 | 86.6 | (76.8, 92.6) | |
| Major brand 6 | 142 | 94.6 | (87.2, 97.8) | |
| Other brands | 155 | 64.5 | (50.0, 76.8) | |
| Don’t know | 178 | 71.3 | (64.0, 77.6) | |
| Open salt | 3 | 13.8 | (3.70, 40.0) | |
| 870 | 78.8 | (72.1, 84.2) | – | |
CI, confidence interval.
Note: The n’s are unweighted numbers with the condition (i.e., numerator) for each subgroup; subgroups that do not sum to the total have missing data.
a Percentages weighted for unequal probability of selection.
b CI calculated taking into account the complex sampling design.
c Chi-square p-value <0.05 indicates that the variation in the values of the subgroup is significantly different from all other subgroups.
Logistic Regression Odds Ratios for Inadequately Iodized Salt Using Factors with Statistically Significant Associations in Households of Selected Children (N = 1068) in Selected AWC Catchment Areas in Telangana, India, 2014.
| Characteristic | n | Odds ratio | (95% CI) | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Urban | 525 | Reference | – | 0.34 |
| Rural/Tribal | 507 | 1.3 | (0.76, 2.2) | |
| Non-poor | 852 | Reference | – | |
| Poor | 180 | 1.5 | (0.64, 3.4) | 0.35 |
| ≥5 | 746 | Reference | – | |
| 0–4 | 286 | 1.2 | (0.57, 2.4) | 0.67 |
| Hyderabad/Medak | 147 | Reference | – | <0.01 |
| Adilabad | 162 | 2.7 | (1.1, 6.9) | |
| Karimnagar | 91 | 1.1 | (0.36, 3.50) | |
| Khammam | 153 | 1.8 | (0.49, 6.20) | |
| Mahbubnagar | 137 | 4.8 | (1.80, 13.0) | |
| Nalgonda | 92 | 3.1 | (1.4, 7.3) | |
| Nizamabad | 49 | 5.9 | (2.30, 15.4) | |
| Ranga Reddy | 72 | 5.5 | (1.60, 18.8) | |
| Warangal | 129 | 4.4 | (1.9, 9.9) | |
| Major brands | 560 | Reference | – | <0.001 |
| Open salt | 20 | 40.9 | (9.5, 176.9) | |
| Don’t know brand | 235 | 5.0 | (2.6, 9.8) | |
| Other brands | 217 | 7.1 | (3.3, 15.4) | |
CI, confidence interval.
Note: The n’s are unweighted numbers with the condition (i.e., numerator) for each subgroup; subgroups that do not sum to the total have missing data.
a Hyderabad and Medak considered as one group to prevent quasi-separation of model.
b CI adjusted for cluster sampling design.
Feasibility of Rice Fortification in Telangana, India.
| Prerequisite Category | Data Sources | Findings | Opportunities for Telangana |
|---|---|---|---|
| Need/documented micronutrient deficiencies | Peer-reviewed literature | High prevalence of anemia and vitamin A deficiency among children 6–59 months of age and pregnant women; high prevalence of zinc deficiency among children 6–59 months | No representative or current data in Telangana (or Andhra Pradesh) on anemia and iron, vitamin A, folate, or vitamin B12 deficiencies. More current evidence of micronutrient deficiencies is needed to justify rice fortification. |
| Sufficient consumption | 2014 Telangana survey | High consumption among both children 6–35 months of age and women 15–49 years of age | Assuming fortification using recommended fortification standards, fortified rice would contribute ≥80% of the RDA for multiple micronutrients in women and ≥80% of RDA iron, thiamin, and riboflavin in children. Increased % RDA of vitamins A and B12 in children and women is substantial considering documented vitamin A deficiency and potential B12 deficiency. |
| Marketing potential and distribution capacity | 2014 Telangana survey and literature on Telangana’s rice milling industry | Fractured commercial market, distribution via India’s public distribution system more feasible than market-based approach | Rice distribution to AWCs as part of midday meals program. |
| Technical and logistical capacity | Peer-reviewed literature related to rice fortification and programmatic reports from rice-fortification projects in India | Extrusion of fortified rice kernels already conducted in India and recommend by India’s National Institute of Nutrition | Rather than establish separate extrusion facilities in Telangana, procurement of fortified kernels from suppliers in India and elsewhere may be the most cost-effective approach. |
Fig 1Percent of Indian RDA for Children and Their Caretakers Based on Rice Consumption Patterns in Households of Selected Children (N = 1068) in Selected AWC Catchment Areas in Telangana, India, 2014.