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Food Insecurity, Health and Nutritional Status among Sample of Palm-plantation Households in Malaysia
Mohamadpour, M.; Mohd Sharif, Z. & Keysami, M.Avakh
Abstract
Food insecurity is a worldwide problem and has been shown to contribute to poor health and nutritional
outcomes. In Malaysia, poor dietary intake, overweight and obesity, diabetes mellitus, and hypercholesterolaemia
have been reported to be more prevalent in females compared to males and in Indians compared
to other ethnic groups. A cross-sectional study was designed to investigate the relationship between food
insecurity and health and nutritional status among 169 Indian women (19-49 years old, non-pregnant, and
non-lactating) from randomly-selected palm-plantation households in Negeri Sembilan, Malaysia. Subjects
were interviewed for socioeconomic and demographic data, and information on household food security
and dietary intake. They were examined for weight, height, waist-circumference, blood pressure and lipids,
and plasma glucose levels. For analysis of data, descriptive statistics, ANOVA, and logistic regression were
used. Majority (85.2%) of the households showed food insecurity as assessed using the Radimer/Cornell
Hunger and Food Insecurity Instrument. The food-secure women had significantly higher mean years of
education and lower mean number of children than food-insecure groups (p<0.05). There was a significant
decrease in the mean household income and income per capita as food insecurity worsened (p<0.05).
Women who reported food security had significantly higher mean diet diversity score (11.60±4.13) than
child hunger (9.23±3.36). The group of subjects with higher intake of meat/fish/poultry/legumes (crude
odds ratio [OR]=0.53, confidence interval [CI]=0.29-0.95) and higher diet diversity score (crude OR=0.87,
CI=0.78-0.97) was more likely to have <3 health risks. Diet diversity score remained a significant protective
factor against heath risks even after adjusting for other variables. The present study showed that food insecurity
is indirectly associated with poor health and nutritional status. Therefore, appropriate communitybased
interventions should be designed and implemented to address the problems of food insecurity and
possible health and nutritional outcomes.
Keywords
Diet diversity; Food insecurity; Health risks; Nutritional status; Malaysia
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