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close this bookCommunity Assessment of Natural Food Sources of Vitamin A, Guidelines for an Ethnographic Protocol (International Nutrition Foundation for Developing Countries - INFDC, 1997, 141 pages)
close this folderAppendices
View the documentAppendix 1: Examples of research site selection
View the documentAppendix 2: Checklist of important background information
View the documentAppendix 2A: Example of background information from the Aetas of Canawan, Morong District, Philippines
View the documentAppendix 3: Some reminders about data-gathering: Do's and don'ts
View the documentAppendix 4: Notes on working with key-informants
View the documentAppendix 5: Recording and organizing fieldnotes
View the documentAppendix 6: Notes on translation from local to national languages
View the documentAppendix 7: An example of selecting key food items from Peru
View the documentAppendix 8: Vitamin A content of foot
View the documentAppendix 9: Notes on selecting the field data-gathering team
View the documentAppendix 10: Selecting representative samples
View the documentAppendix 11: Notes on the credibility of these
View the documentAppendix 12: Comments on using microcomputers
View the documentAppendix 13: Glossary

Appendix 8: Vitamin A content of foot

Analytical values for the vitamin A contents of food for a particular country or region can generally be found by contacting the national health authorities, or through the nutrition and/or agricultural offices in the Capital. Analytical techniques are updated from time to time and the most recent tables should be consulted.

Usually, in tables of food composition, vitamin A contents of food are expressed as IUs (International Units) or REs (Retinol Equivalents). The more recent tables use REs. In most tables, REs incorporate contents of retinol and carotene. In some food items, both of these forms are found, although animal food contains mostly retinol and plant food contains carotene.

Vitamin A contents are quite variable in different food items, and even within a particular food item grown in different parts of the world or exposed to different climatic handling/storage/preparation conditions. The highest levels of vitamin A are found in natural food items such as the livers of animals, carrots, red palm oil, and certain green vegetables and fruits. A recent publication entitled Food Sources of Vitamin A and Provitamin A was published in the UNU Food and Nutrition Bulletin 1992, 14(1):3-35. Another excellent source explaining the vitamin A levels of food is a publication from the International Vitamin A Consultative Group (IVACG) entitled Guidelines for the Development of a Simplified Dietary Assessment to Identify Groups at Risk for Inadequate Intake of Vitamin A. In 1993, C. West and E. Poortvliet released a publication for the Vitamin A Field Support Project called The Carotenoid Content of Foods with Special Reference to Developing Countries, which is a compilation of data on the vitamin A content of foods consumed around the world.

A general rule for vitamin A contents of food is to look at the color or to consider the part of the animal. Dark green vegetables, yellow and red fruits (excluding citrus) and vegetables, and red palm oil are rich sources of carotenoids. Animal sources include liver and organ meat, red meat, whole fish and fish oils, egg yolk, dairy products, and breastmilk. A range of values for vitamin A contents in food, together with a rating value to use in Module 5 tabulations is shown in the table below. While it is best to get a specific vitamin A value from a food composition source of original data, using an equivalent to guess at a rating is sufficient for the exercise in Module 5.

Keep in mind that substantial vitamin A can be added to the diet by eating small amounts of food high in vitamin A or larger amounts of food with modest levels of vitamin A. The bioavailability of vitamin A in food is also worth considering, and foods high in vitamin A must contain several properties for the vitamin A to be used by the body. Food must be palatable to the individual so that it is swallowed, and it must be digested; the diet must also have sufficient fat, protein, energy, and other key nutrients for dietary vitamin A to be utilized in the body.

Recommended levels of dietary vitamin A have been published by the Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) of the United Nations in 1988, and are presented on the next page.

Examples of Food with Approximate Levels of Vitamin A and Rating Value to Use in Module 5

Food Example

Approximate Amt./Range RE/100g

Rating Value

Green leafy vegetables


3 -4

spinach

450

4

amaranth

1000

4

chicory

300

3

dandelion

1300

4

kale

1000

4

coriander leaf

900

4

pumpkin leaf

166

3

drumstick; tree leaf

3300

4

Pumpkin

200

4

Root vegetables


1 -4

cassava

1-6

1

white potato

3

1

sweet potato, yellow

50-700

2-4

carrots

600-3500

4

Grains


0-2

white maize

0

0

yellow maize

20-60

2

rice

0

0

millet

4

1

Fruits


2-3

papaya

50-400

2-3

mango

100-400

2-3

banana

10- 100

2

apricot, fresh

70-500

2-3

Animal foods


2-4

cow's milk

30-40

2

chicken's egg

260

3

beef

25

2

beef liver, kidney

800

4

chicken liver

6-20

2

Fish


1-4

tuna

80-830

2-4

crevalle (Caranx sp.)

60

2

goby (Glossoqobium sp.)

95

2

anchovy

82

2

mackerel

100

2

cod

8-12

1-2

Oils


0-4

coconut oil

0

0

seed oils, various

2- 100

1-2

red palm oil

2.000-24,000

4

narwhal blubber

2,000

4

fish oil, various

40.000-300.000

4

Breastmilk. human

35-50

2

NOTE. Values from Booth et al. (1992) and as reported in tables from regions where the manual was tested.

Rating Values to Calculate Vitamin A Contents of Diets

Rating Value

Amount of Vitamin A

Approximate REs

0

none

none

1

trace

1 - 10

2

small

11 - 100

3

medium

101-500

4

large

>500

FAO Recommended Dietary Intakes of Vitamin A (RE)


Basal

Safe

Infants

180

350

Children



1-6 yr

200

400

6- 15 yr

250-350

400-600

Males

300-400

500-600

Females

270-330

500

Pregnancy

+ 100

+ 100

Lactation

+180

+350