Abstract

Households in low-income settings are vulnerable to seasonal changes in dietary diversity because of fluctuations in food availability and access. We assessed seasonal differences in household dietary diversity in Burkina Faso, and determined the extent to which household socioeconomic status and crop production diversity modify changes in dietary diversity across seasons, using data from the nationally representative 2014 Burkina Faso Continuous Multisectoral Survey (EMC). A household dietary diversity score based on nine food groups was created from household food consumption data collected during four rounds of the 2014 EMC. Plot-level crop production data, and data on household assets and education were used to create variables on crop diversity and household socioeconomic status, respectively. Analyses included data for 10,790 households for which food consumption data were available for at least one round. Accounting for repeated measurements and controlling for the complex survey design and confounding covariates using a weighted multi-level model, household dietary diversity was significantly higher during both lean seasons periods, and higher still during the harvest season as compared to the post-harvest season (mean: post-harvest: 4.76 (SE 0.04); beginning of lean: 5.13 (SE 0.05); end of lean: 5.21 (SE 0.05); harvest: 5.72 (SE 0.04)), but was not different between the beginning and the end of lean season. Seasonal differences in household dietary diversity were greater among households with higher food expenditures, greater crop production, and greater monetary value of crops sale (P<0.05). Seasonal changes in household dietary diversity in Burkina Faso may reflect nutritional differences among agricultural households, and may be modified both by households’ socioeconomic status and agricultural characteristics.

Highlights

  • Dietary diversity is essential for meeting dietary nutrient requirements [1, 2], and as such, is an important determinant of dietary adequacy, nutritional status and many associated health outcomes [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]

  • Our analyses showed differences in the diversity of household diets across agricultural seasons in Burkina Faso except between the beginning and the end of the lean season

  • Household dietary diversity was lowest during the post-harvest season, higher during both the lean season periods, and higher still during the harvest season

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Summary

Introduction

Dietary diversity is essential for meeting dietary nutrient requirements [1, 2], and as such, is an important determinant of dietary adequacy, nutritional status and many associated health outcomes [2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. In low-income rural areas of Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), where the majority of the population still relies on rain-fed, small-scale agricultural production as a principal source. Seasonality in diet diversity in Burkina Faso. The funder had no role in the design, analysis or writing of this article

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