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Dietary practices in nutritional transition: the case of Malaysian urban Chinese


Citation

Khor, Geok Lin and Hsu-Hage, Bridget Huey Huey and Wahlqvist, Mark L. (1998) Dietary practices in nutritional transition: the case of Malaysian urban Chinese. Ecology of Food and Nutrition, 36 (6). pp. 463-489. ISSN 0367-0244; ESSN: 1543-5237

Abstract

In this study involving 336 urban Chinese adults, more than 40% belong to at least the second generation in Malaysia. The result shows the persistence of several Chinese traditional dietary habits. Almost all the subjects take rice daily and an assortment of noodles weekly. A wide variety of vegetables are consumed frequently. Soup is consumed daily or weekly. Steaming and stir frying are preferred methods of cooking. Majority reported adding salt lightly in cooking, eating little fat on meat, and not adding sugar to tea or coffee, but they use sweetened condensed milk. Urban Malaysian Chinese do not appear to manifest a high-fat high-meat diet that is becoming characteristic of rapidly developing countries. Their dietary practices seem to reflect an inclination towards the "behavioural change" dietary pattern away from the "degenerative disease" pattern according to the concept of nutritional transition as described by Popkin.


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Additional Metadata

Item Type: Article
Divisions: Universiti Putra Malaysia
DOI Number: https://doi.org/10.1080/03670244.1998.9991532
Publisher: Overseas Publishers Association
Keywords: Dietary practices; Nutritional transition; Malaysian urban Chinese adults
Depositing User: Nabilah Mustapa
Date Deposited: 04 Jul 2017 03:59
Last Modified: 04 Jul 2017 03:59
Altmetrics: http://www.altmetric.com/details.php?domain=psasir.upm.edu.my&doi=10.1080/03670244.1998.9991532
URI: http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/51329
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