Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria

Background: Food additives are being utilized for both small- and large-scale food production but often find more applicability in mass food production. Food additive consumption over a long period could pose adverse health outcomes. The study determined knowledge, perception, and consumption of foo...

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Main Authors: Muhammed Sani Ibrahim, Aminu Lawal, Ahmed Ayuba Umar, Sunday Asuke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications 2021-01-01
Series:Nigerian Journal of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.njmonline.org/article.asp?issn=1115-2613;year=2021;volume=30;issue=3;spage=232;epage=236;aulast=Ibrahim
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spelling doaj-7b177c60afd749caac7202c5877459a12021-08-09T10:23:26ZengWolters Kluwer Medknow PublicationsNigerian Journal of Medicine1115-26132021-01-0130323223610.4103/NJM.NJM_15_21Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, NigeriaMuhammed Sani IbrahimAminu LawalAhmed Ayuba UmarSunday AsukeBackground: Food additives are being utilized for both small- and large-scale food production but often find more applicability in mass food production. Food additive consumption over a long period could pose adverse health outcomes. The study determined knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria. Methodology: It was a cross-sectional study conducted among 180 full-time female lecturers of the three tertiary institutions, selected through a multistage sampling technique. Data were collected using a pretested self-administered questionnaire. The data were entered into IBM SPSS Statistics 20 and analyzed. Univariate analysis for categorical variables was done using simple proportions. Results: A total of 167 female lecturers responded giving a response rate of 92.8%. Their mean age was 42.7 ± 8.2 years. Majority (109, 65.3%) had good knowledge of food additives, less than half (77, 46.3%) had a good perception of them, and the overall consumption rate for food additives was 97.1%. Majority (77.8%) felt that the risks associated with food additives must never be ignored, about half (47.3%) felt that foods consumed by Nigerians were now generally more harmful. However, only about one-fifth felt that most fast foods do contain food additives (28.1%). Consumption rates were high for both natural and synthetic food additives (61.7%–92.2%), except for Ajinomoto and Vedan which were consumed by only 38 (22.8%). Conclusion: Knowledge of food additives was good, but their perception was poor and consumption was high. Stakeholders must begin to organize and sustain periodic sensitization campaigns on risks associated with the consumption of food additives. Futures studies should identify the reasons for poor perception and high level of consumption despite good knowledge among the study population.http://www.njmonline.org/article.asp?issn=1115-2613;year=2021;volume=30;issue=3;spage=232;epage=236;aulast=Ibrahimconsumptionfemale lecturersfood additiveszaria
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Muhammed Sani Ibrahim
Aminu Lawal
Ahmed Ayuba Umar
Sunday Asuke
spellingShingle Muhammed Sani Ibrahim
Aminu Lawal
Ahmed Ayuba Umar
Sunday Asuke
Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria
Nigerian Journal of Medicine
consumption
female lecturers
food additives
zaria
author_facet Muhammed Sani Ibrahim
Aminu Lawal
Ahmed Ayuba Umar
Sunday Asuke
author_sort Muhammed Sani Ibrahim
title Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria
title_short Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria
title_full Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria
title_fullStr Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria, Nigeria
title_sort knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in zaria, nigeria
publisher Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications
series Nigerian Journal of Medicine
issn 1115-2613
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Background: Food additives are being utilized for both small- and large-scale food production but often find more applicability in mass food production. Food additive consumption over a long period could pose adverse health outcomes. The study determined knowledge, perception, and consumption of food additives among female lecturers in Zaria. Methodology: It was a cross-sectional study conducted among 180 full-time female lecturers of the three tertiary institutions, selected through a multistage sampling technique. Data were collected using a pretested self-administered questionnaire. The data were entered into IBM SPSS Statistics 20 and analyzed. Univariate analysis for categorical variables was done using simple proportions. Results: A total of 167 female lecturers responded giving a response rate of 92.8%. Their mean age was 42.7 ± 8.2 years. Majority (109, 65.3%) had good knowledge of food additives, less than half (77, 46.3%) had a good perception of them, and the overall consumption rate for food additives was 97.1%. Majority (77.8%) felt that the risks associated with food additives must never be ignored, about half (47.3%) felt that foods consumed by Nigerians were now generally more harmful. However, only about one-fifth felt that most fast foods do contain food additives (28.1%). Consumption rates were high for both natural and synthetic food additives (61.7%–92.2%), except for Ajinomoto and Vedan which were consumed by only 38 (22.8%). Conclusion: Knowledge of food additives was good, but their perception was poor and consumption was high. Stakeholders must begin to organize and sustain periodic sensitization campaigns on risks associated with the consumption of food additives. Futures studies should identify the reasons for poor perception and high level of consumption despite good knowledge among the study population.
topic consumption
female lecturers
food additives
zaria
url http://www.njmonline.org/article.asp?issn=1115-2613;year=2021;volume=30;issue=3;spage=232;epage=236;aulast=Ibrahim
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