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Food consumption patterns, diversity of food nutrients and mean nutrient intake in relation to HIV/AIDS status in Kisumu district Kenya

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dc.contributor.author Onyango, Agatha Christine
dc.contributor.author Prof. Walingo, Mary Khakoni
dc.contributor.author Othuon, Lucas
dc.date.accessioned 2016-02-15T13:06:52Z
dc.date.available 2016-02-15T13:06:52Z
dc.date.issued 2010-04-08
dc.identifier.citation Agatha Christine Onyango , Mary Khakoni Walingo & Lucas Othuon (2009) Food consumption patterns, diversity of food nutrients and mean nutrient intake in relation to HIV/AIDS status in Kisumu district Kenya, African Journal of AIDS Research, 8:3, 359-366, DOI: 10.2989/A JAR.2009.8.3.12.933 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 1608-5906
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1439
dc.description.abstract As the causes and consequences of the AIDS epidemic become clearer, so does the fundamental importance of food and nutritional security for HIV-affected individuals. Even as food insecurity remains a major problem in poor households, its effects are worsened in disease states like HIV infection. Food deficiency and nutritional inadequacy compromise an individual’s physical status and work capacity, and may also diminish their resource base and household provisioning. The prevalence of HIV and AIDS in Kenya threatens food production systems, which intensifies poverty, increases the nutritional implications for HIV-infected individuals, accelerates the rate of orphanhood beyond what existing social networks can cope with, and basically affects all indicators of socio-economic development in the country. This cross-sectional study sought to assess food and nutrient intake in HIV-affected versus non-HIV-affected households. Purposive sampling was used to select 160 households (77 HIV-affected households and 83 non-HIV-affected households) in Kisumu district, a lowland area along Lake Victoria. A consolidated questionnaire that included a food-frequency checklist and personal 24-hour dietary recall was used to gather information from 40 households. The data were analysed quantitatively; descriptive statistics were mainly measures of central tendency, and inferential statistics involved chi-square tests and independent t-test samples. A table depicting food composition was used to compute the nutrient intake of each household. The findings reveal a significant relationship between a household’s HIV/AIDS status and nutrient intake. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher taylor and Francis en_US
dc.subject diet en_US
dc.subject food availability en_US
dc.subject food production en_US
dc.subject food security en_US
dc.subject households en_US
dc.subject nutritional status en_US
dc.subject sub-Saharan Africa en_US
dc.title Food consumption patterns, diversity of food nutrients and mean nutrient intake in relation to HIV/AIDS status in Kisumu district Kenya en_US
dc.type Other en_US


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