VARIETY OF INDIVIDUAL FOOD ITEMS CONSUMED BY 11-YEAR OLD CHILDREN IN KWAZULU AND NAMIBIA

Citation
Jm. Mackeown et al., VARIETY OF INDIVIDUAL FOOD ITEMS CONSUMED BY 11-YEAR OLD CHILDREN IN KWAZULU AND NAMIBIA, Ecology of food and nutrition, 33(1-2), 1994, pp. 27-36
Citations number
28
Categorie Soggetti
Nutrition & Dietetics
ISSN journal
03670244
Volume
33
Issue
1-2
Year of publication
1994
Pages
27 - 36
Database
ISI
SICI code
0367-0244(1994)33:1-2<27:VOIFIC>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
A study conducted in 1988 on 389 11-year-old black rural and urban chi ldren in KwaZulu, Natal, South Africa and in Namibia determined, from 24-hour recalls, the variety of food items consumed and ranked the foo d items in descending order according to the total amount consumed. Kw aZulu urban children consumed the largest variety of food items [65] a nd Namibian urban the fewest [43]. Maize meal was ranked the top item for all groups except for the KwaZulu urban group where tea was ranked top. Starches predominated in the food choices of all groups, while f ruit and vegetables hardly featured, particularly in Namibia. The stud y has shown the importance of knowing the basic food items consumed in relative ranking by children in Southern Africa, to develop a basic f ood list for a nutrition education program for them and for possible a pplication in other ''Third World'' countries in Africa.