Authors
Patricia Carignano Torres, Carla Morsello, Jesem DY Orellana, Oriana Almeida, André de Moraes, Erick A Chacón-Montalván, Moisés AT Pinto, Maria GS Fink, Maíra P Freire, Luke Parry
Publication date
2022/4/6
Journal
Scientific Reports
Volume
12
Issue
1
Pages
5213
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Consuming wildmeat may protect against iron-deficiency anemia, a serious public health problem globally. Contributing to debates on the linkages between wildmeat and the health of forest-proximate people, we investigate whether wildmeat consumption is associated with hemoglobin concentration in rural and urban children (< 5 years old) in central Brazilian Amazonia. Because dietary practices mediate the potential nutritional benefits of wildmeat, we also examined whether its introduction into children’s diets is influenced by rural/urban location or household socio-economic characteristics. Sampling 610 children, we found that wildmeat consumption is associated with higher hemoglobin concentration among the rural children most vulnerable to poverty, but not in the least vulnerable rural, or urban children. Rural caregivers share wildmeat with children earlier-in-life than urban caregivers, potentially because …
Total citations
2022202320245102
Scholar articles
P Carignano Torres, C Morsello, JDY Orellana… - Scientific reports, 2022