Abstract

Adequate dietary intake of potassium (K) helps fight noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), mainly hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. This paper (i) estimated the K intake of Ghanaian population using food supply and food composition data and (ii) compared this estimate with the WHO recommended requirement for K in order to assess if there is a risk of inadequate K intake. Food supply data (1961–2011) was obtained from the FAO Food Balance Sheet (FBS) to derive trends in food and K supply. The average food supply in the FBS for 2010 and 2011 was used in assessing the risk of inadequate dietary intake of K. The K contents of the food items were obtained from food composition databases. The mean K supply per capita per day was approximately 856 mg. The assessment suggests a potentially large risk of inadequate dietary K supply at both individual and population levels. The results suggest the need for assessing options for managing K deficiency, including assessment of K supplying power of soils and K fertilizer management in food crop production systems, as well as empirical estimates of K content of food items (including those underreported in the FBS) and mixed diets in Ghana.

Highlights

  • Journal of Nutrition and Metabolism has retracted the article titled “Ghanaians Might Be at Risk of Inadequate Dietary Intake of Potassium” [1]

  • The results suggest the need for assessing options for managing K deficiency, including assessment of K supplying power of soils and K fertilizer management in food crop production systems, as well as empirical estimates of K content of food items and mixed diets in Ghana

  • T deficiency of K can be quantified via food surveys or dietary analysis using food composition data [18] even though food surveys data can be biased by systematic misreporting and behavioural change [19]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Journal of Nutrition and Metabolism has retracted the article titled “Ghanaians Might Be at Risk of Inadequate Dietary Intake of Potassium” [1]. RGInehtsaaeankreacihoafnAPsrtoMictaliegshsituBme at Risk of Inadequate Dietary D David Oscar Yawson, Michael Osei Adu, Benjamin Ason, Frederick Ato Armah,. R Adequate dietary intake of potassium (K) helps fight noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), mainly hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. This paper (i) estimated the K intake of Ghanaian population using food supply and food composition data and (ii) compared this estimate with the WHO recommended requirement for K in order to assess if there is a risk of inadequate K intake. The average food supply in the FBS for 2010 and 2011 was used in assessing the risk of inadequate dietary intake of K.

Methods
Findings
Discussion
Conclusion

Full Text

Published Version
Open DOI Link

Get access to 115M+ research papers

Discover from 40M+ Open access, 2M+ Pre-prints, 9.5M Topics and 32K+ Journals.

Sign Up Now! It's FREE

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call