| Literature DB >> 29026938 |
E M Balk1, G P Adam2, V N Langberg2, A Earley3, P Clark4, P R Ebeling5, A Mithal6, R Rizzoli7, C A F Zerbini8, D D Pierroz9, B Dawson-Hughes10.
Abstract
Low calcium intake may adversely affect bone health in adults. Recognizing the presence of low calcium intake is necessary to develop national strategies to optimize intake. To highlight regions where calcium intake should be improved, we systematically searched for the most representative national dietary calcium intake data in adults from the general population in all countries. We searched 13 electronic databases and requested data from domain experts. Studies were double-screened for eligibility. Data were extracted into a standard form. We developed an interactive global map, categorizing countries based on average calcium intake and summarized differences in intake based on sex, age, and socioeconomic status. Searches yielded 9780 abstracts. Across the 74 countries with data, average national dietary calcium intake ranges from 175 to 1233 mg/day. Many countries in Asia have average dietary calcium intake less than 500 mg/day. Countries in Africa and South America mostly have low calcium intake between about 400 and 700 mg/day. Only Northern European countries have national calcium intake greater than 1000 mg/day. Survey data for three quarters of available countries were not nationally representative. Average calcium intake is generally lower in women than men, but there are no clear patterns across countries regarding relative calcium intake by age, sex, or socioeconomic status. The global calcium map reveals that many countries have low average calcium intake. But recent, nationally representative data are mostly lacking. This review draws attention to regions where measures to increase calcium intake are likely to have skeletal benefits.Entities:
Keywords: Bone health; Dietary calcium intake; Dietary surveys; Osteoporosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29026938 PMCID: PMC5684325 DOI: 10.1007/s00198-017-4230-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Osteoporos Int ISSN: 0937-941X Impact factor: 4.507
Fig. 1Literature flow chart. * The 78 studies included two unpublished datasets
Average dietary calcium intake by country and study characteristics
| Calcium intake (mg/day) | Vitamin D statusa (nmol/L) | Country | Survey years | Ages (years) | Female (%) | BMI (kg/m2) | Calcium intake assessment |
| Representativeb | Female:male ratio | Age analysesc | SES analysesc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| 427 | nd | Argentina | 2004–2005 | 18–49 | 100 | nd | 4819 | No (age, women) | ||||
| 429 | 25–49 | India | 2011–2012 | ≥ 18 | 50 | Recall | 306,329 | Yes | 0.83 | |||
| 440 | nd | Philippines | 2003 | Alld | Food record | 25,882 | No (children) | |||||
| 444 | nd | Mali | 2007 | 15–49 | 100 | Recall | 108 | No (local, women, small) | ||||
| 458 | nd | Bolivia | 2002 | nd | FFQ | 5746 households | Yes | |||||
| 462 | nd | Pakistan | 2008 | ≥ 18 | 100 | 23.8 | Recall | 200 | No (local, women, small) | |||
| 471 | nd | Tanzania | 1987 | 35–74 | Recall | 173 | No (local, age, small, old) | Urban 0.91, rural 1.13 | Older lower | Rural (vs. urban) higher | ||
| 479 | 25–49 | South Africa | 1983–2000 | ≥ 15 | Recall | 3231 | No (old) | 0.65 | ||||
| 483 | 25–49 | South Korea | 2010–2012 | ≥ 19 | 50 | Recall | 15,603 | Yes | Food insufficient lower | |||
| 487 | nd | Barbados | 2000 | ≥ 18 | 25.8 | FFQ and recall | 1739 | Yes | 0.89g | Older higher | ||
| 488 | 50–74 | Norway | 1994–1995 | 24–70 | 25.6 | FFQ | 18,914 | No (age, old) | 0.81 | |||
| 489 | nd | Guam | nd (early 2000s) | 18–83 | Recall | 400 | No (small) | 0.87 | ||||
| 492 | 50–74 | Israel | 1999–2001 | 25–64 | Recall | 2782 | No (age, old) | |||||
| 495 | nd | Egypt | 2004 | 20–60 | 100h | Recall | 1090 | No (age, women) | ||||
| 498 | nd | Myanmar | 1998 | nd | nd | nd | No (old) | |||||
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| 607 | nd | Tonga | 2005–2006 | 40–59 | 32.2 | Recall | 34 | No (local, age, small) | 0.76 | |||
| 616 | nd | Algeria | 2009–2010 | 41–66 (71% of sample) | 27.1 | Recall | 176 | No (local, age, small) | 1.18 | |||
| 636 | nd | Nigeria | 2003–2004 | ndd | FFQ | 13,142 households | No (children) | Rural (vs. urban) lower | ||||
| 664 | nd | Ethiopia | 2005 | ≥ 18 | 22.8 | Recall | 356 | No (local, small) | 0.75 | |||
| 672 | nd | Morocco | 2004 | ≥ 16 | 61 | FFQ | 691 | No (local, small) | Older lower | |||
| 673 | nd | Hungary | 2009 | ≥ 19 | FFQ | 3077 | Yes | 0.93 | Older lower | |||
| 673 | nd | Costa Rica | 1996–1998 | 20–65 | 50 | Recall | 60 | No (age, small, old) | ||||
| 695 | nd | Kuwait | 2008–2009 | ≥ 19 | 55.3 | Recall | 1049 | Yes | 0.79 | Similare | ||
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| 805 | 50–74 | Australia | 2011–2012 | ≥ 19 | 53 | Recall | 9338 | Yes | 0.86 | Older lower | ||
| 805 | nd | Mexico | 2006 | 20–59 | 60 | FFQ | 15,746 | No (age) | 0.9 | Urban vs. rural similar | ||
| 807 | 25–49 | New Zealand | 2009 | ≥ 19 | 27.6 | Recall | 4721 | Yes | 0.83g | Older lower | ||
| 830 | 25–49 | Polandi | 2002–2005/2010–2011 | 45–69/45–64 | 27.1/29.1 | FFQ | 9859/3862 | No (local, age) | 1.03/1.07 | Rural (vs. urban) lower | ||
| 837 | nd | Jamaica | nd (pre-2000) | 25–74 | 60 | 26.7 | Recall | 73 | No (local, age, small, old) | |||
| 838 | nd | Serbia | 1998 and 2003 | 30–74 | Food record | 1305 | No (age) | younger 0.77, older 0.92 | Older lower | |||
| 856 | 25–49 | Jordan | 2012 | ≥ 18 | 51 | Recall | 55 | No (small) | ||||
| 859 | 25–49 | Iran | 2001 | ≥ 40 | Recall | 1922 | No (local, age) | 0.91 | Older lower | |||
| 865 | nd | Latvia | 1997 | 19–64 | Recall | 32 | No (age, small, old) | |||||
| 877 | 50–74 | France | 2005–2007 | 18–79 | Food record | 1082 | Yes | Middle-age higher | ||||
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| 1067 | 50–74 | Switzerland | 2006–2012 | 35–74 | 50 | 25.1 | FFQ | 4307 | No (local, age) | 0.90 | ||
| 1068 | 25–49 | Germany | 2005–2007 | ≥ 19 | Recall | 13,959 | Yes | 0.91 | Older lower | |||
| 1080 | nd | Ireland | 2010 | 18–90 | Food record | 1499 | Yes | |||||
| 1097f | 25–49 | Finland | 2002 | 25–64 | Recall | 2007 | No (age) | 0.89 | ||||
| 1102 | 50–74 | Netherlands | 2010 | 19–69 | Recall | 2100 | No (age) | |||||
| 1233f | 25–49 | Iceland | 2003 | 30–85 | 52 | FFQ | 944 | No (local, age, small) | Older higher |
Table data are grouped according to emphasis (italics and normal text) by bands of average dietary calcium intake. See Electronic supplementary material—Appendix C for references
BMI body mass index, FFQ Food Frequency Questionnaire, N sample size, nd no data (not reported), SES socioeconomic status
aSerum/plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels country-level categorizations among adults. From Wahl et al. [3]
bWas the study nationally representative and current? Local = survey conducted in specific towns, cities, or regions; age = restricted by age range; children = children included; women = women only; small = sample size < 1000; old = surveys conducted before 2000
cDifferences in dietary calcium intake between different subgroups, by age or socioeconomic status; lower and higher refer to average calcium intake in noted subgroup. No assessment of statistical significance is implied
dIncludes children
eOr no pattern noted
fExplicitly included dietary supplements; however, most studies did not report whether supplement intake was included
gLess than 0.80 in younger age groups (18/19 to 29/30 years old)
hMothers only
iTwo complementary studies were included for these countries. Relevant data are reported for each study, separated by a forward slash, with the larger study reported first. Where only a single value is presented, the data were the same for both studies, except for calcium intake (which is an average across studies) and whether the studies are nationally representative (which is assessed across studies)
Fig. 2Global map of average dietary calcium intake categories. Each country with available data is colored based on its estimate of mean or median dietary calcium intake. Bright red < 400 mg/day, dark red 400–499 mg/day, orange 500–599 mg/day, brown 600–699 mg/day, yellow 700–799 mg/day, moss green 800–899 mg/day, light green 900–999 mg/day, and dark green ≥ 1000 mg/day. An interactive version of the map is also available online at www.iofbonehealth.org/facts-and-statistics/calcium-map