Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea

Background and Objectives: Fortifying commercial table salt with iodine is the principal strategy used globally to prevent dietary iodine deficiency. However, the costs of providing fortified salt to remote communities may result in it not being locally available or too expensive for many households...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Benson, Todd, Schmidt, Emily, Namusoke, Hanifa, Temple, Victor J., Holtemeyer, Brian, Codling, Karen, Rudert, Christiane
Format: Journal Article
Language:Inglés
Published: HEC Press 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142362
_version_ 1855536161422835712
author Benson, Todd
Schmidt, Emily
Namusoke, Hanifa
Temple, Victor J.
Holtemeyer, Brian
Codling, Karen
Rudert, Christiane
author_browse Benson, Todd
Codling, Karen
Holtemeyer, Brian
Namusoke, Hanifa
Rudert, Christiane
Schmidt, Emily
Temple, Victor J.
author_facet Benson, Todd
Schmidt, Emily
Namusoke, Hanifa
Temple, Victor J.
Holtemeyer, Brian
Codling, Karen
Rudert, Christiane
author_sort Benson, Todd
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Background and Objectives: Fortifying commercial table salt with iodine is the principal strategy used globally to prevent dietary iodine deficiency. However, the costs of providing fortified salt to remote communities may result in it not being locally available or too expensive for many households. This study shows that barriers to consuming adequately iodized salt remain significant for remote rural households in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Methods and Study Design: Using data from a rural household survey conducted in four areas of PNG in 2018, two issues are examined. First, we contrast the characteristics of households that reported consuming or not consuming iodized table salt, respectively. Second, the adequacy of the iodine content of samples of table salt consumed was assessed in the laboratory. Results: Nine percent of the 1,026 survey households reported not consuming iodized table salt. These households tend to live in remote communities, are among the poorest households, have received no formal education, and have experienced recent food insecurity. Second, 17 percent of the 778 salt samples tested had inadequate iodine. The brand of salt most commonly consumed had the highest share of samples with inadequate iodine levels. Conclusions: Particularly in remote communities, ensuring that individuals consume sufficient iodine will require going beyond salt iodization to use other approaches to iodine supplementation. To ensure that the iodine intake of those using commercial table salt is adequate, closer monitoring of the iodine content in table salt produced or imported into PNG and enforcement of salt iodization regulations is required.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace142362
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher HEC Press
publisherStr HEC Press
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1423622025-12-08T10:11:39Z Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea Benson, Todd Schmidt, Emily Namusoke, Hanifa Temple, Victor J. Holtemeyer, Brian Codling, Karen Rudert, Christiane commercial food fortification biofortification common salt surveys households iodine diet rural areas nutritional requirements salts Background and Objectives: Fortifying commercial table salt with iodine is the principal strategy used globally to prevent dietary iodine deficiency. However, the costs of providing fortified salt to remote communities may result in it not being locally available or too expensive for many households. This study shows that barriers to consuming adequately iodized salt remain significant for remote rural households in Papua New Guinea (PNG). Methods and Study Design: Using data from a rural household survey conducted in four areas of PNG in 2018, two issues are examined. First, we contrast the characteristics of households that reported consuming or not consuming iodized table salt, respectively. Second, the adequacy of the iodine content of samples of table salt consumed was assessed in the laboratory. Results: Nine percent of the 1,026 survey households reported not consuming iodized table salt. These households tend to live in remote communities, are among the poorest households, have received no formal education, and have experienced recent food insecurity. Second, 17 percent of the 778 salt samples tested had inadequate iodine. The brand of salt most commonly consumed had the highest share of samples with inadequate iodine levels. Conclusions: Particularly in remote communities, ensuring that individuals consume sufficient iodine will require going beyond salt iodization to use other approaches to iodine supplementation. To ensure that the iodine intake of those using commercial table salt is adequate, closer monitoring of the iodine content in table salt produced or imported into PNG and enforcement of salt iodization regulations is required. 2020-08-01 2024-05-22T12:10:22Z 2024-05-22T12:10:22Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142362 en https://doi.org/10.2499/p15738coll2.133302 Open Access HEC Press Benson, Todd; Schmidt, Emily; Namusoke, Hanifa; Temple, Victor J.; Holtemeyer, Brian; Codling, Karen; and Rudert, Christiane. 2020. Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea. Asia Pacific Journal of Clinical Nutrition 29(2): 414-422. https://doi.org/10.6133/apjcn.202007_29(2).0024
spellingShingle commercial food fortification
biofortification
common salt
surveys
households
iodine
diet
rural areas
nutritional requirements
salts
Benson, Todd
Schmidt, Emily
Namusoke, Hanifa
Temple, Victor J.
Holtemeyer, Brian
Codling, Karen
Rudert, Christiane
Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea
title Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea
title_full Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea
title_fullStr Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea
title_full_unstemmed Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea
title_short Limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural Papua New Guinea
title_sort limits to commercially iodized salt to address dietary iodine deficiency in rural papua new guinea
topic commercial food fortification
biofortification
common salt
surveys
households
iodine
diet
rural areas
nutritional requirements
salts
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/142362
work_keys_str_mv AT bensontodd limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea
AT schmidtemily limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea
AT namusokehanifa limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea
AT templevictorj limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea
AT holtemeyerbrian limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea
AT codlingkaren limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea
AT rudertchristiane limitstocommerciallyiodizedsalttoaddressdietaryiodinedeficiencyinruralpapuanewguinea