A Cost Constraint Alone Has Adverse Effects on Food Selection and Nutrient Density: An Analysis of Human Diets by Linear Programming
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 December 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Elsevier in Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 132 (12) , 3764-3771
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/132.12.3764
Abstract
Economic constraints may contribute to the unhealthy food choices observed among low socioeconomic groups in industrialized countries. The objective of the present study was to predict the food choices a rational individual would make to reduce his or her food budget, while retaining a diet as close as possible to the average population diet. Isoenergetic diets were modeled by linear programming. To ensure these diets were consistent with habitual food consumption patterns, departure from the average French diet was minimized and constraints that limited portion size and the amount of energy from food groups were introduced into the models. A cost constraint was introduced and progressively strengthened to assess the effect of cost on the selection of foods by the program. Strengthening the cost constraint reduced the proportion of energy contributed by fruits and vegetables, meat and dairy products and increased the proportion from cereals, sweets and added fats, a pattern similar to that observed among low socioeconomic groups. This decreased the nutritional quality of modeled diets, notably the lowest cost linear programming diets had lower vitamin C and β-carotene densities than the mean French adult diet (i.e., <25% and 10% of the mean density, respectively). These results indicate that a simple cost constraint can decrease the nutrient densities of diets and influence food selection in ways that reproduce the food intake patterns observed among low socioeconomic groups. They suggest that economic measures will be needed to effectively improve the nutritional quality of diets consumed by these populations.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- A systematic review of socio-economic differences in food habits in Europe: consumption of fruit and vegetablesEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2000
- Perceived barriers in trying to eat healthier – results of a pan-EU consumer attitudinal surveyBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1999
- Access to healthy foods: part I. Barriers to accessing healthy foods: differentials by gender, social class, income and mode of transportHealth Education Journal, 1998
- The social organization of nutritional inequitiesSocial Science & Medicine, 1996
- Diet quality index: Capturing a multidimensional behaviorJournal of the American Dietetic Association, 1994
- Diet planning for humans using mixed-integer linear programmingBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1993
- Public health implications of dietary differences between social status and occupational category groups.Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 1992
- LINEAR PROGRAMMING ANALYSIS OF CONSTRAINTS UPON HUMAN DIETSJournal of Agricultural Economics, 1991
- Very low-cost nutritious diet plans designed by linear programmingJournal of Nutrition Education, 1981
- Linear Programming Models for the Determination of Palatable Human DietsJournal of Farm Economics, 1959