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High national and sub-national coverage of iodised salt in India: evidence from the first National Iodine and Salt Intake Survey (NISI) 2014–2015.

Authors :
Pandav, Chandrakant S
Yadav, Kapil
Salve, Harshal R
Kumar, Rakesh
Goel, Akhil D
Chakrabarty, Arijit
Source :
Public Health Nutrition; Nov2018, Vol. 21 Issue 16, p3027-3036, 10p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objective: The National Iodine and Salt Intake Survey (NISI) 2014–2015 was undertaken to estimate household iodised salt coverage at national and sub-national levels in India. Design: Cross-sectional survey with multistage stratified random sampling. Setting: India was divided into six geographic zones (South, West, Central, North, East and North-East) and each zone was further stratified into rural and urban areas to yield twelve distinct survey strata. Subjects: The target respondent from each household was selected as per predefined priority; wife of the household head, followed by women of reproductive age, followed by any adult available during the visit. Results: Households (n 5717) were surveyed and salt samples (n 5682) were analysed. Household coverage of iodised salt (iodine ≥ 5 ppm) was 91·7 (95 % CI 91·0, 92·7) %. Adequately iodised salt (iodine ≥ 15 ppm) was consumed in 77·5 (95 % CI 76·4, 78·6) % of households. Significant differences in coverage were seen across six geographic regions, with North and North-East zones on the verge of achieving the universal salt iodisation target of >90 % coverage. Coverage of households with adequately iodised salt (adjusted OR; 95 % CI) was significantly less in rural households (0·55; 0·47, 0·64), lower/backward castes (0·84; 0·72, 0·98), deprived households (0·72; 0·61, 0·85) as assessed by multidimensional poverty index, households with non-diverse diet (0·73; 0·62, 0·86) and households using non-packaged salt (0·48; 0·39, 0·59) and non-refined salt (0·17; 0·15, 0·20). Conclusions: India is within striking reach of achieving universal salt iodisation. However, significant differentials by rural/urban, zonal and socio-economic indicators exist, warranting accelerated efforts and targeted interventions for high-risk groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13689800
Volume :
21
Issue :
16
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Public Health Nutrition
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
132368372
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980018002306