Energy and Nutrient Intakes of Public Health Concern by Rural and Urban Ghanaian Mothers Assessed by Weighed Food Compared to Recommended Intakes
Prince K. Osei, Megan A. McCrory, Matilda Steiner-Asiedu, Edward Sazonov, Mingui Sun, Wenyan Jia, Tom Baranowski, Gary Frost, Benny Lo, Christabel A. Domfe, Alex K. Anderson

TL;DR
This study compares the energy and nutrient intakes of rural and urban Ghanaian mothers using weighed food records to see how they align with recommended dietary guidelines.
Contribution
The study uses weighed food records instead of self-reports to assess dietary intakes of Ghanaian mothers, revealing specific micronutrient inadequacies.
Findings
Rural mothers had higher energy and nutrient intakes than urban mothers.
Most mothers met recommended nutrient intakes, but many were deficient in folate.
Urban mothers were more likely to have iron and zinc deficiencies compared to rural mothers.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Previous studies assessing dietary intake have used self-report methods, prone to misreporting. Using researcher-conducted weighed food records, we assessed rural and urban mothers’ energy and nutrient intakes of concern and compared them to recommended nutrient intakes (RNIs). Methods: This cross-sectional study was conducted in rural (Asaase Kokoo) and urban (University of Ghana Staff Village) communities. Dietary data were collected from fifty-four mothers (26 rural, 28 urban) on 2 weekdays and 1 weekend day, analyzed with software, and programmed with West African, FNDDS, Kenyan, Ugandan, and USDA food composition databases. Results: Mean (SD) ages (years) were 35.8 (11.6) and 44.4 (7.6), and mean energy intakes (kcal) were 2026 (461) and 1669 (385) for rural and urban mothers, respectively. Mean percentage contributions of macronutrients to energy intake were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Nutritional Studies and Diet
