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vol.73 suppl.1P187/S3-P60 SOBERANÍA Y SEGURIDAD ALIMENTARIA Y NUTRICIONAL EN LA FORMACIÓN DE NUTRICIONISTAS EN UNIVERSIDADES PÚBLICAS DE ARGENTINA Y BRASIL. 2023P189/S3-P62 TBCA E TBCAPP: NOVAS VERSÕES DE FERRAMENTAS ESSENCIAIS PARA A NUTRIÇÃO NO BRASIL índice de autoresíndice de assuntospesquisa de artigos
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Archivos Latinoamericanos de Nutrición

versão impressa ISSN 0004-0622versão On-line ISSN 2309-5806

Arch Latinoam Nutr vol.73  supl.1 Caracas out. 2023  Epub 11-Jan-2025

 

Comunicaciones - Pósters

P188/S3-P61 FOOD PRICE-BASED POLICY COULD OPTIMIZE BENEFITS FOR FOOD CONSUMPTION IN BRAZIL

Dr. Rafael Moreira-Claro1 

Dra. Emanuella Gomes-Maia2 

Dra. Camila Mendes dos Passos3 

Dra. Fernanda Granado1 

Dra. Camila Zancheta-Ricardo4 

1Ufmg, Belo Horizonte, Brasil

2UESC, Ilhéus, Brasil

3UFV, Viçosa, Brasil

4USP, São Paulo, Brasil.


Abstract:

This study analyzed how the price of different food groups associates to the adoption of a healthy diet, based on the Brazilian Dietary Guidelines, and to per capita income distribution in the country. Methods: Data from the Brazilian Household Budget Survey from 2008/09 (550 strata; 55,570 households) were used. A Dietary Composition Inadequacy Index (DCII) was calculated from the difference between the share (%) of food groups of current and recommended diet. A hypothetical recommended diet was previously developed through linear programing and based on the Brazilian Dietary Guidelines (NOVA food classification system). The influence of food price on DCII was assessed by linear regression models of log-log type for the total population and according to income strata. Results. The price of unprocessed or minimally processed foods and ultra-processed foods presented the greatest associations to DCII. Each 1.00% increase in price of unprocessed or minimally processed foods would increase the DCII by 0.76% (towards a less healthy diet), whereas the same increase in price of ultra-processed foods would decrease the DCII by 0.70% (towards a healthy diet), especially among lower- income families (1.11%). Furthermore, each 1.00% increase in per capita income would increase the DCII by 0.30% (towards a less healthy diet). Conclusions: These findings indicate that taxation of unhealthy foods and subsidies for healthy food would lead to improvements in the dietary composition of Brazilians.

Keywords: food price; diet composition; dietary index; food consumption; household budget survey; dietary guidelines

Creative Commons License This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License