Family composition, income, and healthy diet in rural China: evidence from three provinces
Minda Yang, Nimra Amar, Longqiang Zhao, Cong Pan

TL;DR
This study examines how family structure and income affect healthy eating in rural Chinese households, finding that higher income improves diet quality while more elderly members lead to poorer nutrition.
Contribution
The paper provides new empirical evidence on the relationship between household demographics, income, and dietary health in rural China.
Findings
Higher household income significantly improves dietary diversity and quality in rural China.
A higher proportion of elderly individuals in a household is linked to poorer dietary outcomes.
The study highlights the role of economic and demographic factors in shaping sustainable dietary practices.
Abstract
A healthy diet is essential for public health and plays a central role in sustainable food systems. This paper investigates the impact of family composition and income on dietary health within rural households in China, analyzing how these factors correlate with dietary diversity and quality. Utilizing a 3-day food consumption record data across three provinces, we apply ordinary least squares regression to explore the relationships with three key dietary health indicators: the Entropy Index of dietary diversity (E), the Chinese Food Pagoda Score (CFPS), and the Chinese Healthy Eating Index (CHEI). Our findings indicate that higher household income significantly improves all measures of dietary health, affirming the critical role of economic factors in achieving a nutritious diet. In contrast, a higher proportion of elderly individuals within households is associated with poorer dietary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNutritional Studies and Diet · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Health disparities and outcomes
