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Shifting Trend of Protein Consumption in Southeast Asia: Toward Health, Innovation, and Sustainability.

Tjahyo, A. S., Wu, J. Y., Smith, G., Acuin, C., Maier, A. B., Sim, S. Y. J., Taneja, R., Haldar, S. and Henry, C. J., 2024. Shifting Trend of Protein Consumption in Southeast Asia: Toward Health, Innovation, and Sustainability. Current Developments in Nutrition, 8 (10), 104443.

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DOI: 10.1016/j.cdnut.2024.104443

Abstract

Complementing discourse following a February 2023 event on dietary protein needs in Southeast Asia (SEA), this symposium report summarizes the region's protein intake, while simultaneously examining the impact of dietary shift toward complementary and alternative proteins and their health implications. It highlights the importance of protein quality in dietary evaluations, optimal intake, and sustainability, advocating for environmentally conscious protein production and innovation in future foods. Discussion points, expert opinions, national nutrition data, and relevant literature, addressing protein intake and quality, their impact on human health, and various technologies for future foods production, have been included. Despite increased protein supply in SEA, protein requirements, particularly during crucial life stages, are often unmet owing to insufficient focus on protein quality. Factoring in amino acids content and bioaccessibility are crucial for assessing nutritional requirement and sustainability evaluations, rather than solely relying on protein quantity alone. Different food sources of protein also have different key conutrients for health relevance such as vitamin B-12 and ω-3 fatty acids. Innovations in food structure, processing, and technology are key to developing nutritious, sustainable, and appealing future foods, including from complementary and alternative protein sources, while considering safety aspects, especially allergenicity. Addressing protein needs in SEA requires a dual focus on protein quantity and quality, underlining the role of public health policies and guidelines that consider key nutritional differences of animal-source and plant-based proteins. To address regional demands, future food innovations should aim at creating unique yet needful food categories or supplementing current existing sources, rather than mimicking current products.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:2475-2991
Uncontrolled Keywords:dietary protein; protein intake; protein quality; complementary and alternative protein; future foods; Southeast Asia
Group:Faculty of Health & Social Sciences
ID Code:40502
Deposited By: Symplectic RT2
Deposited On:22 Nov 2024 12:39
Last Modified:22 Nov 2024 12:39

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