Global Public Health (Dec 2024)

Dietary patterns and their socio-demographic correlates in the context of migration and urbanisation demonstrate nutrition transitions in South Africa

  • Chantel F. Pheiffer,
  • Stephen T. McGarvey,
  • Carren Ginsburg,
  • Sadson Harawa,
  • Michael J. White

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2024.2375541
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 1

Abstract

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This paper investigates the demographic and socio-economic correlates of dietary patterns in South Africa, drawing on a sample of young adults experiencing internal migration and urbanisation. We use data from the 2018 baseline survey of the Migrant Health Follow-Up Study, an original longitudinal cohort study consisting of 3,087 internal migrants and rural residents aged 18–40 nested within the Agincourt Health and socio-Demographic Surveillance System in rural northeast South Africa. We employ principal components analysis to identify dietary patterns from food frequency questionnaires and ordinary least squares regression to assess whether migration and other socio-economic characteristics correlate with specific dietary patterns at baseline. We observe five distinct dietary patterns characterised by frequent consumption of processed foods, red meat, fruits and vegetables, diverse foods, and high sugar/fat foods. We find migration to be significantly associated with more frequent consumption of both processed foods and fruits and vegetables; we also find the association between migration status and dietary patterns to be heterogenous depending on migrants’ destinations. This paper extends current understanding of changing dietary patterns in the context of nutrition transitions with attention to dynamic migration processes rather than static rural-urban differences.

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