Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia

In 2014, a utilization survey was conducted by HarvestPlus among Zambian households belonging to the Livelihood Enhancement Groups (LEGs) that participated in the cultivation of Vitamin A maize (VAM) in the Northern Province. After the first year in which the community was introduced to the bioforti...

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Autores principales: Mulungu, Kevin, Herrington, Caitlin
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Food Policy Research Institute 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146231
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author Mulungu, Kevin
Herrington, Caitlin
author_browse Herrington, Caitlin
Mulungu, Kevin
author_facet Mulungu, Kevin
Herrington, Caitlin
author_sort Mulungu, Kevin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In 2014, a utilization survey was conducted by HarvestPlus among Zambian households belonging to the Livelihood Enhancement Groups (LEGs) that participated in the cultivation of Vitamin A maize (VAM) in the Northern Province. After the first year in which the community was introduced to the biofortified VAM, LEGs grew the crop in group plots, shared produce from the harvest, and participated in their first home-use testing. Nintey-six of the households that cultivated and shared produce were randomly sampled to answer a range of questions. Sampled households included 52 in the Mbala district and 44 in the Luwingu district; The integration of VAM into common diets was assessed through descriptive analysis. Almost all households preferred VAM to both cassava and white maize meal. There were no differences in the likability of VAM across districts or genders. The reasons cited for VAM preference include: nutritional content, taste, and the ability to prepare nshima using less VAM flour compared to cassava and white maize flour. Farmers also liked the agronomic traits of VAM, such as their early maturing and double-cobbing characteristics. These results provide a mix of agronomic and consumption attributes that can be used to promote VAM in the future. These results can also have further research implications, such as the need to econometrically test households' perceived VAM benefits.
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spelling CGSpace1462312025-11-06T07:24:28Z Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia Mulungu, Kevin Herrington, Caitlin biofortification health maize nutrition diet In 2014, a utilization survey was conducted by HarvestPlus among Zambian households belonging to the Livelihood Enhancement Groups (LEGs) that participated in the cultivation of Vitamin A maize (VAM) in the Northern Province. After the first year in which the community was introduced to the biofortified VAM, LEGs grew the crop in group plots, shared produce from the harvest, and participated in their first home-use testing. Nintey-six of the households that cultivated and shared produce were randomly sampled to answer a range of questions. Sampled households included 52 in the Mbala district and 44 in the Luwingu district; The integration of VAM into common diets was assessed through descriptive analysis. Almost all households preferred VAM to both cassava and white maize meal. There were no differences in the likability of VAM across districts or genders. The reasons cited for VAM preference include: nutritional content, taste, and the ability to prepare nshima using less VAM flour compared to cassava and white maize flour. Farmers also liked the agronomic traits of VAM, such as their early maturing and double-cobbing characteristics. These results provide a mix of agronomic and consumption attributes that can be used to promote VAM in the future. These results can also have further research implications, such as the need to econometrically test households' perceived VAM benefits. 2016-01-27 2024-06-21T09:06:16Z 2024-06-21T09:06:16Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146231 en https://doi.org/10.5897/AJFS2016.1458 Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Mulungu, Kevin; Herrington, Caitlin. 2016. Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia. HarvestPlus Research for Action. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146231
spellingShingle biofortification
health
maize
nutrition
diet
Mulungu, Kevin
Herrington, Caitlin
Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia
title Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia
title_full Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia
title_fullStr Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia
title_full_unstemmed Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia
title_short Acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin A maize into common diets in northern Zambia
title_sort acceptance and integration of biofortified vitamin a maize into common diets in northern zambia
topic biofortification
health
maize
nutrition
diet
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/146231
work_keys_str_mv AT mulungukevin acceptanceandintegrationofbiofortifiedvitaminamaizeintocommondietsinnorthernzambia
AT herringtoncaitlin acceptanceandintegrationofbiofortifiedvitaminamaizeintocommondietsinnorthernzambia