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Socio-Cultural and Economic Drivers of Plant and Animal Protein Consumption in Malaysia: The SCRiPT Study

Image of Socio-Cultural and Economic Drivers of Plant and Animal Protein Consumption in Malaysia: The SCRiPT Study

Author

Judhiastuty Februhartanty - Personal Name
Shilpi Gupta - Personal Name
Mohd Noor Ismail - Personal Name
Laurence Tibère - Personal Name
Adam Drewnowski - Personal Name
Jean-Pierre Poulain - Personal Name
Cyrille Laporte - Personal Name
Yasmine Alem - Personal Name
Elise Mognard - Personal Name
Helda Khusun - Personal Name
Roselynne Anggraini - Personal Name
Norimah A Karim - Personal Name

Abstract:
Countries in South East Asia are undergoing a nutrition transition, which typically involves a dietary shift from plant to animal proteins. To explore the main drivers of protein consumption, the SCRiPT (Socio Cultural Research in Protein Transition) study recruited a population sample in Malaysia (N = 1604). Participants completed in-person 24 h dietary recalls and socio-demographic surveys. Energy and nutrient intakes were estimated using Nutritionist Pro. A novel recipe-based frequency count coded protein sources as meat (chicken, beef, pork, and mutton), fish, eggs, dairy, and plants (cereals, pulses, tubers). Dietary intakes and frequencies were examined by gender, age, income, education, ethnicity, religion, and family status, using ANOVAs and general linear models. Energy intakes were 1869 kcal/d for men and 1699 kcal/d for women. Protein intakes were 78.5 g/d for men and 72.5 g/d for women. Higher energy and protein intakes were associated with Chinese ethnicity, higher education and incomes. Frequency counts identified plant proteins in 50% of foods, followed by meat (19%), fish (12%), eggs (12%), and dairy (7%). Most frequent source of meat was chicken (16%) rather than pork or beef (1.5% each). In bivariate analyses, animal protein counts were associated with younger age, higher education and incomes. In mutually adjusted multivariate regression models, animal proteins were associated with education and ethnicity; plant proteins were associated with ethnicity and religion. Protein choices in Malaysia involve socio-cultural as well as economic variables.

Detail Information

Series Title : -
Call Number : -
Publisher : : nutrients., 2020
Collation : Nutrients . 2020 May 25;12(5):1530.
Language : English
ISBN/ISSN : -
Classification : NONE

File Attachment

  • Socio-Cultural and Economic Drivers of Plant and Animal Protein Consumption in Malaysia: The SCRiPT Study

Subject(s)

scientific publication
Malaysia
animal protein
plant protein
protein transition
education
eating pattern
ethnicity
food choices
incomes
religion

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