Diet Modelling in the Development of a Healthy Diet for the Ghanaian Population
Date
2023
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Journal of Food, Agriculture and Development
Abstract
Diet modelling is one of the important steps in developing food-based dietary
guidelines (FBDGs). However, this component remains uncommon in the FBDGs
of many low-and middle-income countries. A diet modelling package (DietSolve)
provided by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) was used to formulate a
healthy diet based on estimating the daily proportions of food groups that best
meet the dietary goals established for the FBDGs for Ghana. Input data for the
modelling included a list of commonly eaten foods across the agreed food groups,
nutrient and energy content of the foods, current energy and nutrient consumption,
and energy and nutrient constraints linked to the dietary goals, as determined by
the FBDG multi-Sectoral Technical Task Team (MTTT). The modelling was based
on assumptions and constraints including a total daily dietary energy target of 2000
kcal/day; the percentage contribution (energy targets) of the macronutrients as
follows: carbohydrates (55-70%), protein (10-20 %), and fat (20-30%) to the total
energy target; and calcium (1100 mg/day), iron (20 mg/day), and zinc (11 mg/day)
constraints. The situation analysis and evidence review carried out as a prior step
guided the diet modelling constraints. Energy contributions were also set for a
serving of each food group. The final recommendations were based on food
groups with each food group consisting of a variety of commonly consumed foods.
The total weight of the optimized diet was estimated at 1514 g/day, including
144g/day of animal-source foods, 41.5g/day of discretionary choices, 226g/day of
fruit, 227g/day of vegetables, 6g/day of healthy fats and oil, 198g/day of legumes,
nuts, and seeds, and 672g/day of staples. This food group composition will provide
an estimated 2639 kcal/day, a deviation of about 32% above the energy target set,
made up of ~59% from carbohydrates, ~15% from protein and ~25% from fat, and
meeting/exceeding the micronutrient targets set. The Optimised diet is healthier
compared to the present dietary patterns of the population; its lower ASF
component is known to impact less on the environment.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Food-based dietary guidelines, linear programming, diet modelling