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      More than two-thirds of dietary iodine in children in northern Ghana is obtained from bouillon cubes containing iodized salt.

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          Abstract

          Bouillon cubes are widely consumed by poor households in sub-Saharan Africa. Because their main ingredient is salt, bouillon cubes could be a good source of iodine if iodized salt is used in their production and if their consumption by target groups is high. Our objective was to measure the iodine content of bouillon cubes, estimate their daily intake in school-aged children and evaluate their potential contribution to iodine intakes.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Public Health Nutr
          Public health nutrition
          Cambridge University Press (CUP)
          1475-2727
          1368-9800
          Apr 2017
          : 20
          : 6
          Affiliations
          [1 ] 1Department of Community Nutrition,School of Allied Health Sciences,University for Development Studies,Tamale,Ghana.
          [2 ] 2Human Nutrition Laboratory,Institute of Food Science and Nutrition, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology,LFVD20,Schmelzbergstrasse 7,CH-8092 Zurich,Switzerland.
          [3 ] 3UNICEF,Nutrition Section,New York,NY,USA.
          Article
          S1368980016003098
          10.1017/S1368980016003098
          27903312
          07f9b95b-563f-47fc-91bc-3ae7b9e118eb
          History

          Bouillon cubes,Iodine deficiency,Schoolchildren,Seasoning,Urinary iodine

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