University of Wollongong
Browse

Study Protocol: Interactive Dynamics of Coral Reef Fisheries and the Nutrition Transition in Kiribati

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-17, 16:18 authored by Christopher D Golden, Julien Ayroles, Jacob G Eurich, Jessica A Gephart, Katherine L Seto, Michael K Sharp, Prentiss Balcom, Haley M Barravecchia, Keegan K Bell, Kelvin D Gorospe, Joy Kim, William H Koh, Jessica Zamborain-Mason, Douglas J McCauley, Helen Murdoch, Nilendra Nair, Kaaro Neeti, Simone Passarelli, Aaron Specht, Elsie M Sunderland, Aritita Tekaieti, Aranteiti Tekiau, Rosemary Tekoaua, Eretii Timeon
The Kiribati 2019 Integrated Household Income and Expenditure Survey (Integrated HIES) embeds novel ecological and human health research into an ongoing social and economic survey infrastructure implemented by the Pacific Community in partnership with national governments. This study seeks to describe the health status of a large, nationally representative sample of a geographically and socially diverse I-Kiribati population through multiple clinical measurements and detailed socio-economic surveys, while also conducting supporting food systems research on ecological, social, and institutional drivers of change. The specific hypotheses within this research relate to access to seafood and the potential nutritional and health benefits of these foods. We conducted this research in 21 of the 23 inhabited islands of Kiribati, excluding the two inhabited islands—Kanton Islands in the Phoenix Islands group with a population of 41 persons (2020 census) and Banaba Island in the Gilbert Islands group with a population of 333 persons (2020 census)—and focusing exclusively on the remaining islands in the Gilbert and Line Islands groups. Within this sample, we focused our intensive human health and ecological research in 10 of the 21 selected islands to examine the relationship between ecological conditions, resource governance, food system dynamics, and dietary patterns. Ultimately, this research has created a baseline for future Integrated HIES assessments to simultaneously monitor change in ecological, social, economic, and human health conditions and how they co-vary over time.

Funding

National Science Foundation (CNH 1826668)

History

Journal title

Frontiers in Public Health

Volume

10

Language

English

Usage metrics

    Categories

    No categories selected

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC