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dc.contributor.advisorDr. Nurul Islam
dc.contributor.authorMAJUMDER , UTTAM KUMAR
dc.date.accessioned2022-04-18T08:34:31Z
dc.date.available2022-04-18T08:34:31Z
dc.date.issued2009-12
dc.identifier.urihttp://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/152
dc.descriptionBangladesh has been facing the chronic food deficit for many years. In the past, Bangladesh has suffered poverty, frequent natural disasters, and rapid population growth and there has been a gradual decline in per capita nutrient intake. Traditional dietary practices have undergone significant changes since 1937, which has contributed to the decline of nutrient uptake. In 1937, rice was the chief component of the diet at the village level, with protein supplied by lentils, peas, Bengal gram, green gram, black gram, cowpea and kheshari etc. But the daily nutrient intake of poor people was better than that of today. Massive starvation during the famine in 1943 caused a change in dietary practices. People began to eat green leaves, roots, tubers, and many unfamiliar foods because of the scarcity of cereals and the sharp increase in the price of rice. In 1971, in the refugee camp in India, both adults and children ate unfamiliar foods and gradually accustomed themselves to using wheat as their staple diet. In 1974 and 1977, crop failure and flood in Bangladesh caused more changes in food habits and dietary food consumption pattern (Roy and Haider, 1988). This was associated with natural calamities that adversely affected the production of rice and other crops in the country almost every year and the newly born country experienced an acute food shortage.en_US
dc.description.abstractThe present study applied different statistical tools to identify the socio-economic and demographic factors affecting child malnutrition, food consumption and nutrients intake pattern of the households and to suggest measures to improve the present dietary intake pattern towards food security of the rural households in Bangladesh. The study was carried out on all households randomly selected from two villages from Dinajpur as a rice surplus district and all the households of two villages from Bagerhat as a rice deficit district using a three-stage random sampling scheme. Information about socio-demographic and economic characteristics of the households was collected by using a structured questionnaire. Food consumption data were collected through 24 hours recall and partly by weighing method. Height, weight and mid arm circumference of all the children under 6 years of age from the study population were measured using standardized instruments.en_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherHAJEE MOHAMMAD DANESH SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY UNIVERSITY, DINAJPUR.en_US
dc.subjectSocio economic status of the peoples of Bangladesh and other 13 countriesen_US
dc.subjectHypothesisen_US
dc.subjectFood and nutrient intake pattern in Bangladesh and other countriesen_US
dc.titleSTATISTICAL ANALYSIS OF FOOD CONSUMPTION BEHAVIOUR IN SELECTED AREAS OF BANGLADESH: AN EMPIRICAL STUDYen_US
dc.typeThesisen_US


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