4.7 Article

Adequacy of Nutrient Intake and Malnutrition Risk in Older Adults: Findings from the Diet and Healthy Aging Cohort Study

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15153446

Keywords

nutrient; malnutrition; aged; nutritional assessment; Asian

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This study reported on the nutrient intake and prevalence of malnutrition risk in a community sample of older adults in Singapore. The findings showed that a majority of older adults exceeded the recommended intake for sugar and saturated fat, while their intake of dietary fiber and calcium were insufficient. Additionally, a significant proportion of older adults were found to be at moderate to high malnutrition risk.
There is a lack of data on the adequacy of nutrient intake and prevalence of malnutrition risk in Asian populations. The aim was to report on the nutrient intake and prevalence of malnutrition risk in a community sample of older adults in Singapore. Analysis was performed on 738 (n = 206 male, n = 532 male, aged 67.6 & PLUSMN; 6.0 years) adults 60 years and above. Intakes of macro- and micronutrients were evaluated against the Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDAs). Malnutrition risk was assessed using the Nutrition Screening Initiative Determine Your Nutritional Health checklist. It was found that 90.5% older adults exceeded the sugar intake, 68.5% males and 57.1% females exceeded the intake limit for saturated fat, and 33% males had inadequate dietary fiber intake when compared to the RDAs. Inadequate dietary calcium intake was found in 49.5% males and 55.3% females. There were 22.3% of older adults at moderate to high malnutrition risk. Singaporean older adults need to reduce their dietary intakes of sugar and saturated fat and increase their intakes in dietary fiber and calcium. Current findings provide public health awareness on the importance of healthy eating and will facilitate decision making by health promotors to deliver targeted nutrition care programs.

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