An international team of researchers is working on a pioneering project to identify changes in diet globally, caused by increased migration, which could prevent obesity, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.
The project will investigate dietary transitions in Ghana which, like many other African countries, is currently experiencing rapid change partly driven by increasing migration to cities.
The team of researchers, led by the University of Sheffield in the UK, are investigating what drives unhealthy dietary changes in order to prevent diseases such as obesity, cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes.
More From This Section
Principal investigator of the study, Professor Michelle Holdsworth said: "Diets are changing globally and dietary transition is now happening in most cities of the global south, including countries in Africa, Central and Latin America and Asia, where people's habits are changing from a traditional plant-based diet - which are healthier - to a diet that is high in processed, energy dense convenience foods, rich in fat and sugar, but poor in nutrients".
"Unhealthy diets are associated with the rapid rise of diet-related diseases such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, heart diseases and some cancers," he said.
The research will be conducted in collaboration with the University of Ghana, University of Health and Allied Sciences, Ghana, Loughborough University, University of Liverpool, , and the French Agricultural Research & International Cooperative Organisation (CIRAD).
Amos Laar, lead of the study at the University of Ghana, said: "We will undertake novel approaches for collecting data on food consumption and practices, and the factors associated with them".
"The different approaches will include collecting the views of communities and stakeholders in identifying solutions to the problem of eating unhealthy diets. We will be interviewing women and adolescent girls about what kinds of food they eat by using photography to explore the factors that influence these decisions," he said.
The project is funded by a grant from the Drivers of Food Choice (DFC) Competitive Grants Programme which is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the Department for International Development (DFID), and managed by the University of South Carolina Arnold School of Public Health, USA.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content