Objectives To study the impact of migration on food consumption among Indian factory workers and their siblings and spouses.Design A cross-sectional study was conducted to assess diet using an interviewer-administered semi-quantitative FFQ from which intake of 184 commonly consumed food items was obtained.Settings Participants recruited from factory sites in Bangalore, Lucknow, Nagpur and Hyderabad.Subjects The sample comprised 7049 participants (416 % female), and included urban, migrant and rural groups.Results Thirteen food items were eaten by the greatest proportion of individuals on a daily basis. These were all indigenous foods. The proportion of people consuming tandoori roti, dal with vegetables, potato and ghee on a daily basis was highest in the urban sample, intermediate in the migrant group and lowest in the rural group (P 001). The proportion of individuals consuming Western food on a weekly basis followed a similar trend.Conclusions The diet of this sample is predominantly indigenous in nature, irrespective of migration status, with the prevalence of daily Western food consumption being minimal. Copyright © 2010 The Authors.
CITATION STYLE
Bansal, D., Satija, A., Khandpur, N., Bowen, L., Kinra, S., Prabhakaran, D., … Ebrahim, S. (2010). Effects of migration on food consumption patterns in a sample of Indian factory workers and their families. Public Health Nutrition, 13(12), 1982–1989. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980010001254
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