Abstract
The aim of this study was to compare the food consumption of the population of Coari, Amazonas State, Brazil, according to the NOVA Classification, during the hydrological phases of drought and flooding of the Amazon rivers. An epidemiological, population-based, cross-sectional study was carried out. The sample consisted of 457 adult individuals. Data were collected in two stages using a sociodemographic instrument, a 24-hour food recall and a food frequency questionnaire adapted to local habits. The data were analyzed using the statistical program R version 4.2.4, using Pearson's chi-square, Fischer's exact and Bhapkar's tests. The sample was predominantly female (drought = 70%/flood = 71.2%) and brown (drought = 65.4%/flood = 66.2%). Most of the interviewees ate meals (breakfast, lunch and dinner). Afternoon snacks were the most common intermediate meal, especially during flooding (274/70.2%). In natura or minimally processed foods predominated at the three main meals (95%). Ultra-processed foods were consumed little or not at all and were mentioned especially during the drought (152/33.3%; p = 0.007). On the other hand, consumption of regional foods (tucumã, beiju, tapioca flour and açaí) increased during the flood (p < 0.001). Consumption of in natura or minimally processed foods continues to be the mainstay of the diet in the interior of Amazonas, with a predominance of regional foods during the flood and processed and ultra-processed foods during the drought, demonstrating the influence, albeit subtle, of the hydrological phases on the food consumption of this population.
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