Adolescence is a period of rapid physical and emotional change when nutrition is critical for optimal growth and development. This is particularly relevant in Nigeria as 43 % of the country is under 14 years of age and 21 % is adolescent (10–19 years)(1,Reference Samuel2) . In addition, 19 % of girls 15–19 years old nationally have given birth; this rate is much higher in the northern states of Bauchi (41 %), Kebbi (27 %) and Sokoto (32 %)(3). Pregnancy during adolescence can have negative consequences for the mother and infant and perpetuate the intergenerational cycle of undernutrition(Reference Norris, Frongillo and Black4). However, many nutrition projects target adolescent girls who are already married, pregnant or mothers. Practitioners seldom design these projects for adolescents and instead adapt projects designed for older women. To address undernutrition, we must consider not only adolescent girls but also adolescent boys, as they grow up to be husbands, fathers and household decision-makers(5).
Identifying interventions to support optimal adolescent nutrition practices requires examining data on nutrition status, dietary practices and effective communication platforms. Available studies indicate undernutrition is a serious concern in Nigeria and overweight/obesity is a rising issue for adolescents. Undernutrition is more common for younger adolescents (10–14 years) than older adolescents (15–19 years). An estimated 15 % of younger adolescent girls are underweight and 21 % are stunted(3,6) . Anaemia is also highly prevalent among adolescent girls – more than 40 % of girls 10–14 years and 53 % of girls 15–19 years are anaemic(3,6) . Although nationally representative data are unavailable for adolescent boys, a few studies conducted in the southern states reported that 3–25 % of boys 10–19 years old are underweight(Reference Adeomi, Adelusi and Adedeji7–Reference Onabanjo and Balogun15).
While several studies have examined adolescent nutrition in Nigeria, little of this research has been done in the north(Reference Wrottesley, Mates and Brennan16). Previous studies in the north have found that unequal intrahousehold food allocation, limited participation in decision-making and limited purchasing power negatively affect adolescent girls’ dietary intake(5,Reference Sosanya, Freeland-Graves and Gbemileke17,Reference Shapu, Ismail and Ahmad18) . In another study, adolescents reported household size and financial constraints limited animal-source food consumption(Reference Sosanya, Freeland-Graves and Gbemileke17).
These studies vary in quality, adolescent sub-group (e.g. gender), demographic (mostly among in-school adolescents) and geographic coverage (mostly in southern states). They also rarely solicit input from adolescents on how to design projects that promote nutritious food consumption among their peers. Therefore, the objectives of this study were to explore the following to inform future nutrition project design: (1) dietary practices of adolescent boys and girls, (2) norms and aspirations that influence dietary practices and (3) acceptable communication platforms to promote healthy adolescent diets.
Methods
Study design
USAID Advancing Nutrition completed this formative research study using traditional and participatory qualitative research methods, a 24-h diet recall and secondary data. The topics in the guides were informed by Patton et al.’s conceptual framework for adolescent growth and nutrition (Fig. 1)(Reference Patton, Neufeld and Dogra19), although it was outside of the scope of this study to examine all factors in the framework. Following the conceptual framework, we present the findings for food choice and dietary intake as the key behaviours of interest, and then we present how those choices are influenced by the food environment (i.e. context in which consumers acquire, prepare and consume food(20)) and agency. The influence of social, cultural and gender systems and food and agriculture systems are integrated throughout the findings as cross-cutting factors in the conceptual framework.
We invited stakeholders to participate in workshops in each state to ensure local input in the study design, interpretation of the findings and development of nutrition project recommendations. Stakeholders included nutrition focal persons from relevant state ministries, parents of adolescents, community leaders, implementing partners and adolescent boys and girls.
Study setting
We conducted this study in February 2023 in Bauchi, Kebbi and Sokoto States in northern Nigeria. Study sites were in six local government areas (LGA) in three livelihood zones: Sokoto millet, cowpeas, groundnuts and livestock; Sokoto-Rima-Kano riverine flood plain rice and fishing; and the central sorghum, maize, groundnut, cowpeas and sesame livelihood zones(21). The rainy season typically extends from June to October and the lean season from July to September.
Sokoto had the LGA with the highest population density (20 863 people/kilometres (km)2) and Kebbi had the LGA with the lowest (78 people/km2). Based on a pilot study of a market-based food environment assessment (M-FEA) previously conducted by USAID Advancing Nutrition(22), the selected communities in the LGA mostly had open-air markets and convenience stores. Some had small grocery stores, bread shops or bakeries, and street vendors. Many markets had vendors selling a variety of healthy foods and foods to limit year around, low quantities of advertisements and moderate produce quality. The M-FEA identified about 300 unique foods available, with the least diversity in Kebbi. The lowest cost of a healthy diet was $0·79–$3·27/d for an adult. Just prior to data collection for this study, food security was between minimal and stressed in Kebbi, minimal and crisis in Sokoto, and mostly minimal in Bauchi(23).
Study population and sampling
Within each state, we selected LGA included in the M-FEA to enable analysis of study data by key market food environment characteristics. This included one urban and one rural LGA in each state considering differences in demographics, food security status and agricultural characteristics. Within each LGA, we selected three communities based on proximity to key markets identified during the M-FEA. All selected communities were between 1 and 1·5 km from the markets. USAID Advancing Nutrition did not implement project activities in these communities other than the M-FEA and this study.
We conducted thirty-six focus group discussions (FGD), with 216 participants (n 180 adolescents, n 36 influencers). We conducted six FGD with each participant group in line with typical guidance(Reference Hennink and Kaiser24,Reference Carlsen and Glenton25) . We conducted a total of twelve FGD in each state: one FGD in a rural and one in an urban community for each adolescent group (pregnant girls 15–19 years old, non-pregnant girls 15–19 years old, younger adolescent girls 10–14 years old, older adolescent boys 15–19 years old and younger adolescent boys 10–14 years old) and with influencers. We included the following types of influencers: community leaders, religious leaders, teachers, elders, parents of adolescents and community health workers or volunteers.
The LGA provided introductions to community leaders, who assisted in identifying diverse adolescent FGD participants (e.g. socio-economic status, in-school and out-of-school, married and unmarried) and influencers. We asked or ascertained in a culturally appropriate manner if older adolescent girls were pregnant before recruiting them. We purposively selected six participants per FGD to ensure moderators could solicit input from all participants and support adolescents in activities, particularly those with limited literacy(Reference Guest, Namey and Mitchel26).
Data collection techniques and procedures
Focus group discussions
We used FGD for this exploratory study as an appropriate way to gather data on common experiences and perceptions(Reference Guest, Namey and Mitchel26), to engage adolescents for data collection and to accommodate the short study timeline. We conducted separate FGD for each adolescent group and male and female influencers. FGD were completed in Hausa and audio-recorded with consent. FGD with adolescents covered topics including adolescent agency related to food, food security, trusted information sources on nutrition and suggestions for interventions to encourage peer consumption of nutritious foods. The FGD included participatory exercises such as creating daily activity calendars, ranking exercises and drawing(27). FGD with influencers explored factors that influence adolescents’ diets, the role of family and community members in adolescent diets, food security and suggestions for interventions.
Diet Quality Questionnaire with adolescents
Using the Diet Quality Questionnaire (DQQ) developed for Nigeria(28), data collectors administered a 24-h diet recall to the adolescent FGD sample (n 180). The dietary recall was completed individually with each adolescent after the FGD. The DQQ asked about consumption of twenty-nine food groups the adolescent ate inside or outside the home. This list-based dietary recall method uses sentinel food lists(29).
Data analysis
Translators transcribed the Hausa FGD recordings into English. The study team then organised and coded them using ATLAS.ti software(30). We used predetermined codes based on the research questions as well as codes that emerged from the data. Four team members coded 10 % of the transcripts to establish intercoder reliability and independently coded the remaining transcripts. During this initial coding, the team reflected on how our personal experiences and biases influence interpretation and the importance of avoiding making assumptions and judgements when coding. One team member reviewed all coded transcripts for consistency and quality. We used secondary data from the M-FEA on community distance to market and key market food environment characteristics (e.g. cost of diet and food availability) to explore patterns in the qualitative data by market food environment characteristics. We also explored variations in patterns by urban/rural, influencers and adolescent categories.
We analysed data on twenty-nine food groups from DQQ in R 4.2.3 software(31). The indicators of diet quality examined were food group diversity score, minimum dietary diversity for women of reproductive age (MDD-W), consumption of all five recommended food groups (all-five), non-communicable disease (NCD)-protect score, NCD-risk score and global dietary recommendations (GDR) score(28).
Results
Participant description
As planned, there were thirty-six participants per category. The adolescents’ average household size was ten people (Table 1). None of the adolescent boys were married, but most of the older pregnant girls and some older non-pregnant girls were married. Half of adolescents attended conventional school during the day and Islamic school in the evening, while the other half only attended Islamic school during the day or evening. A lower proportion of pregnant girls 15–19 years old attended school compared with other adolescent groups. The mean age of the influencers was 40 years, their average household size was 11 and almost all had an adolescent in their household.
FGD, focus group discussion.
* Other included community leaders and elders, such as traditional birth attendants.
Dietary intake
Data from the DQQ showed that on average, adolescents reported consuming six out of ten food groups the previous day (Table 2). However, there was a wide disparity, with some adolescents reporting consumption of only one food group and others reporting consumption of all ten. Approximately a quarter of girls 15–19 years old did not meet the MDD-W, with one reporting that she consumed only one food group the previous day. Only half of adolescents (56 %) consumed all five recommended food groups. The recommended food groups missing in the diet of the other half of the adolescents were whole grains (48 % consumed), nuts and seeds (49 %) and eggs (24 %). One notable difference was that more adolescent girls 15–19 years old consumed meat, fish and poultry (83 % v. 50–67 %), but fewer dark green leafy vegetables (53 % v. 61–77 %) than other adolescent categories (Fig. 2; online Supplementary Table 1). In the previous day, approximately a third or more adolescents consumed several food groups to limit such as baked/grain-based sweets (52 %), deep fried foods (42 %), other sweets (37 %), unprocessed red meat (31 %) and soft drinks (30 %), particularly in urban areas.
FGD, focus group discussion; MDD-W, minimum dietary diversity for women of reproductive age; GDR, global dietary recommendations; NCD, non-communicable disease.
* Food group diversity score includes ten food groups: (1) grains, white roots and tuber, and plantains; (2) pulses (beans, peas and lentils); (3) nuts and seeds; (4) dairy; (5) meat, poultry and fish; (6) eggs; (7) dark green leafy vegetables; (8) other vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables; (9) other vegetables; (10) other fruits.
† GDR score = NCD – Protect – NCD – Risk + 9; measures adherence to global dietary recommendations protective against non-communicable diseases.
‡ NCD – protect score measures adherence to global dietary recommendations on foods to consume: (1) whole grains; (2) pulses; (3) nuts and seeds; (4) vitamin A-rich orange vegetables; (5) dark green leafy vegetables; (6) other vegetables; (7) vitamin A-rich fruits; (8) citrus; (9) other fruits.
§ NCD – risk score measures adherence to global dietary recommendations on foods to limit including: (1) soft drinks; (2) baked/grain-based sweets; (3) other sweets; (4) processed meats; (5) unprocessed meat; (6) deep fried food; (7) fast food and instant noodles; (8) packaged ultra-processed salty snacks.
|| All five recommended food groups include (1) starchy staples, (2) vegetables, (3) fruits, (4) pulses, nuts, and seeds and (5) animal-source foods.
During the FGD, common dishes adolescents reported consuming during the previous day for meals were swallow (starchy, stiff dough) made from maize, millet, guineamaize, rice or sorghum with soup of okra or baobab leaves; rice with stew/beans/pepper and oil; and pap (white corn meal) with kosai (bean cake). Several adolescents (more in urban areas) also reported eating pasta and instant noodles. A few adolescents reported eating milk, eggs, chicken and fish, but overall, few discussed consuming animal-source foods. This may be because meat was included in small quantities in the stew or soup they consumed. Common snacks adolescents reported consuming were fruits (orange, mango and banana), awara (tofu) and kosai. More adolescents in urban than rural areas reported snacking except for in Kebbi State (online Supplementary Table 2).
Food choice
Perceptions of nutritious and non-nutritious foods
Adolescents perceived a range of foods to be nutritious and associated different functional and physical effects to these foods (Table 3). Among the foods they ate the previous day, they commonly reported that beans and water are nutritious, in addition to rice, soup, swallow made with maize or rice, yam, soya bean and milk. In contrast, several influencers noted that fruits, vegetables (especially leafy green vegetables), beans, soya bean and animal-source foods are nutritious.
Adolescents described how nutritious foods provide strength to do work, aid in growth, contribute to intelligence, increase blood, satisfy hunger and lead to good health. Physical benefits they described were outward signs of health, including that nutritious foods make a person fat (which was desirable), have glowing skin and no wrinkles. Some also noted that one has to eat to one’s satisfaction (fullness) to benefit from nutritious foods.
There was some variation in nutritious food perceptions between boys and girls. More older boys than younger boys mentioned that nutritious foods make one’s skin glow and that this makes them attractive to girls. Girls talked about the value of nutritious foods during menstruation and childbirth. Across age groups, girls explained that nutritious foods make their skin glow, which some older girls noted helps attract future husbands.
Adolescents provided less consistent responses about non-nutritious foods than nutritious ones, some perceptions about nutritious and non-nutritious foods were contradictory, and they held some misconceptions about non-nutritious foods. Several adolescents mentioned rice as a non-nutritious food, while others perceived liquids such as tea, water and milk to be non-nutritious. Others considered awara, vegetables (e.g. carrots, tomatoes and cucumbers), fruits (e.g. oranges and mango) and staples such as rice, fura (dough balls made from millet) with nono (fermented milk drink), cassava and pasta as non-nutritious. Some adolescents noted that foods that they do not eat often are non-nutritious.
As with nutritious foods, adolescents largely identified non-nutritious foods by their physical effects. Adolescents reported that non-nutritious foods provide no satisfaction, leaving them hungry. They said they only consume these foods for the taste or that they did not see any change in their bodies after eating these foods. When asked about the negative consequences, adolescents shared that non-nutritious foods make them slim, ill and weak. Except for younger adolescent boys, all adolescent participant groups mentioned that not eating nutritious foods would result in dull or dark skin. Boys specifically mentioned that a lack of nutritious food would result in stunted growth, while girls mentioned that lack of good nutrition would result in loss of blood. A few older adolescent girls mentioned that some foods such as chinchin (crunchy fried snack) and bread made the body heavy (considered a negative), but adolescents largely did not talk about being overweight in a negative light.
Food perceptions related to girls’ reproductive health
Adolescent girls shared nutrition perceptions related to their reproductive health which influenced their food choice during menstruation and pregnancy (Table 3). Girls typically said that during menstruation, they are advised to avoid sweet foods, cold water and cold food and to consume nutritious foods to replenish blood.
Pregnant girls said that healthcare providers advised them to eat foods like beans, leafy green vegetables, animal-source foods and awara. Despite receiving dietary advice from health workers, only a few pregnant adolescent girls living in urban areas discussed taking iron folic acid supplements in FGD.
Food preferences
Food preferences were a key driver of adolescent food choice. They described preferring a range of foods, but primarily preferred staples, beans and vegetables. Taste was the most important characteristic of preferred foods, with adolescents saying they tasted good, were delicious or ‘loved’ the food. Sometimes, they associated their preferences with how the food affects their body, such as giving energy, building the body or giving strength (particularly among boys). Rice, such as with beans or a vegetable soup, was the most preferred food across adolescent groups. They shared that they enjoy rice, and it is delicious, satisfying, and sweet, keeps you full, increases strength, gives energy and increases blood in the body. A few said they like rice because they eat it often and are used to it, while others said they like it because they do not always get to eat it. In urban areas and markets with a high number of advertisements (based on the M-FEA), adolescents expressed an equal preference for rice and spaghetti or other noodles like Indomie (instant noodles). Other common foods adolescents liked were beans, soup (e.g. sorrel, Baobab leaves and okra), swallow made from maize, guinea corn (sorghum), or rice, and stew. Animal-source foods and fruits were not common favourites.
Aspirations
Peer aspirations can influence adolescent food choice as they consider the perceived status and benefits of foods. Adolescents described functional benefits of foods that support their aspirations, like giving strength to do work for boys and to help have a healthy pregnancy and childbirth for girls. Adolescent girls expressed aspirations to get married, have children and a safe delivery, and be good mothers. Married adolescent girls aspired to be good wives and to support their husbands’ businesses, so their families could thrive. Adolescent boys often aspired to become influential people, such as religious leaders, to protect their community. Girls aspired to get a full education to help other women in their community, while boys aspired to gain an education to better their businesses.
Food environment
Household food access
Adolescents primarily ate food at home, making the home central to adolescents’ food environment (Table 4). Influencers reported accessing a wide variety of foods across seasons from their own production and market purchases. Influencers in rural and urban areas maintained farms, in which they grew crops such as millet, guinea corn, beans and rice.
Influencers and adolescents reported ready access to markets, and all lived in communities within a 40-min walk of a market (based on the M-FEA). Influencers said they regularly purchased food in markets and at the farmgate, particularly foods they did not produce themselves. While participants and the M-FEA showed availability of diverse foods in markets, influencers reported lacking enough money to purchase the desired quantities of these foods for their families, including enough nutritious foods for adolescents. Influencers and participants in rural areas, Sokoto and communities with a high cost of diet in nearby markets (based on the M-FEA) discussed food access constraints more than other participants.
Adolescent food access
Adolescents primarily ate the same food as others in their household and were thus mostly dependent on household food access. Influencers and adolescents characterised provision of sufficient, nutritious for adolescents as a strong familial responsibility, with roles prescribed by sociocultural norms. For unmarried adolescents, fathers were responsible for earning income to purchase food for the family and leaving the house to find food. For married adolescent girls, husbands were largely responsible for providing food.
Agency
Adolescent food acquisition and food choice
Within the context of adolescents’ food environments, they exerted degrees of agency or self-described ‘freedom’ in acquiring food and making food choices depending on gender, age and marital status (Table 5). Adolescents sometimes reported eating food that other family members did not. These were typically snacks that they ate if they were outside of the home, alone at home or if there was not enough of a snack to share. Adolescents reported less strict norms around sharing and serving snacks than meals because they said fathers do not eat snacks, are not always home when they were eaten and do not think snacks are satisfying due to their small quantity.
Adolescents across groups and geographies were able to buy food with money they earned; however, older adolescent boys had greater access to income and mobility to do this than other adolescent groups. Adolescents typically purchased snacks, which were often nutritious, like kosai and awara. Occasionally, older adolescent boys purchased meals outside of the home if they did not like what their mother made for dinner.
Girls had less mobility to leave home than boys. Younger girls, who were all unmarried, talked more about purchasing snacks for themselves while they were at the market or hawking (selling goods on the street) than older girls did. Pregnant girls expressed the least agency over food than other adolescent groups as few reported purchasing or eating food that other family members did not. As most pregnant girls were married, they described being reliant on their husband to make food purchases, having more responsibility and less freedom than unmarried girls. They may also have had limited mobility while pregnant.
Adolescents’ influence on household food choice
Married girls made cooking decisions for their household, while unmarried adolescents typically had limited influence over household food choices despite heavy involvement in food preparation and cooking for girls and farming for boys. Some female influencers said they solicited unmarried girls’ opinions on what to cook and a few noted they take adolescent’s food preferences into account when deciding what to cook. Other influencers said only parents decide what to cook. Some older boys had a larger influence on household food choices because they used their own money to purchase food for the household.
Intrahousehold food allocation
Mothers mediated food access for unmarried adolescents by determining serving order and the quantity of food distributed. Adolescents were served food after their father and young children in the household, and boys and girls usually ate separately. Married adolescent girls served themselves food last as the mother and wife (or along with co-wives).
Activity patterns and communication platforms
To inform the design of interventions to reach adolescents, we explored daily activity patterns and communication platforms that they thought projects could use to engage them and their peers. Adolescents described active daily schedules, which typically included frequenting school, markets, farms and gathering with friends (see online Supplementary Table 3). Adolescents discussed a wide range of platforms to engage peers and were motivated to share nutrition information with their peers. Some thought group discussions would be valuable. They also thought radio, phones and social media (WhatsApp and Facebook), and inviting healthcare workers to discuss nutritious foods and healthy eating in schools would reach adolescents. Adolescents reported that the most trusted sources of information were parents, phones and social media, radio and television, health workers and nutrition experts, and teachers.
Discussion
This study used qualitative methods, a 24-h dietary recall and secondary data to explore the dietary practices of adolescents (10–19 years) in three states in northern Nigeria. We found that adolescent diets were diverse, with an average of six food groups consumed the previous day, but only one in five adolescents ate all five recommended food groups the previous day. About a third of adolescents also consumed foods to limit, such as baked/grain-based sweets, deep-fried foods, unprocessed red meat and soft drinks. While dietary diversity for adolescents has not been estimated at the national level in Nigeria, our study found higher dietary diversity among adolescents than other studies in the north(Reference Shapu, Ismail and Ahmad18) and south(Reference Okolosi32) and than adults in a study that administered the DQQ at the national level(28). But similar to our study, the national DQQ survey found a large proportion of adults consumed vegetables and animal-source foods, food groups likely to be missing from diets were whole grains and nuts and seeds, and about a third of the population consumed foods to limit(28). It is important to note that our study sample was not representative and our results may be higher because the study was conducted right after the harvest season and in communities close to markets(33).
Our findings confirm the importance of and interplay between factors influencing adolescent food choice and dietary intake in Patton et al.’s conceptual framework(Reference Patton, Neufeld and Dogra19). Different forms of embodied experience and knowledge were key drivers of adolescent food choice. Rather than providing biomedical explanations about nutrition, adolescents primarily discerned and came to understand the nutritional qualities of foods based on how they make them feel when they eat them and the effects (or lack thereof) they experienced. Adolescents perceived nutritious foods to be those that are filling and that have a positive effect on the body, thus expressing embodied nutrition knowledge based on bodily experience(Reference Garth34). Despite adolescents’ reports that health workers were trusted sources of information, they did not readily discuss receiving dietary recommendations from the health sector, apart from some pregnant girls who received dietary advice and iron folic acid supplements through health clinics.
We found that taste was a key driver of adolescent food choice, in line with a global study on adolescent food practices that included Nigeria(Reference Fleming, de Oliveira and Hockey35). Adolescents focused on the taste of foods when describing their food preferences, such as when describing favourite dishes of rice with beans or a vegetable soup as delicious and sweet. They also described a positive bodily response to food, such as keeping you full and giving energy, as part of what makes a food desirable. Adolescents perceived these positive bodily responses as supporting their life aspirations. Adolescents also discussed preferring foods they have access to. Adolescents living in urban areas and near markets with a high number of advertisements preferred spaghetti and other noodles more than other adolescents, suggesting an interplay between taste and exposure to foods. Such an association between food advertising and adolescent food preferences has been found in high-income countries(Reference Neufeld, Andrade and Ballonoff Suleiman36–38). Adolescents’ tastes were developed within and shaped by their food environment, as taste is not simply a sensory experience but is structured and shaped by food access, socio-economic conditions, power and social boundaries(Reference Mintz39–Reference Wilk and Finnis41).
As other studies have shown, adolescent food choice was also influenced by the food environment(Reference Neufeld, Andrade and Ballonoff Suleiman36). The home food environment was the most influential sphere of their food environment as they primarily had access to and ate food provided by their parents (or husbands for older married adolescent girls) within the home. This may vary by context within Nigeria as another study in Nigeria found that adolescents often ate alone(Reference Fleming, de Oliveira and Hockey35). Parents (and husbands for married girls) had strong familial responsibility to provide nutritious foods for adolescents. Diverse foods were available in study food environments, but families were not always able to afford sufficient, nutritious foods for adolescents.
Adolescents possessed and exercised agency related to food as has been found in other contexts(Reference Neufeld, Andrade and Ballonoff Suleiman36,Reference Neely, Walton and Stephens42) , but this agency was significantly structured and circumscribed by age, gender and marital status for girls as has been found by other studies in Nigeria. Adolescents were largely not involved in decision-making around food acquisition, purchase and preparation, except for married adolescent girls. Adolescents had some agency to make food purchases and consume food on their own, particularly snacks, with older boys having the most agency and pregnant girls having the least. Similar to our findings, in Sokoto State, married adolescent girls 15–19 years old noted that their husbands made decisions about what food to purchase and prepare, but wives were responsible for deciding who ate first(5). We also found that older boys were more likely to purchase foods for personal consumption from the market than girls, likely due to norms around control of income. A study conducted in the northern states of Kano, Katsina and Jigawa found that only 40 % of girls had full control over their incomes, while others had partial or no control with older male siblings or fathers exercising control over the money the girls earned(43). A study conducted among adolescent girls 10–19 years old in urban Borno State reported that more than half of the participants said it was hard to buy, cook and store nutritious foods, primarily due to their current food budget(Reference Shapu, Ismail and Ahmad18). At mealtimes, we found that adolescents were served after fathers and young children and married adolescent girls served themselves last. In Bauchi State, adolescent girls reported receiving smaller food portions compared with their adolescent male siblings(Reference Sosanya, Freeland-Graves and Gbemileke17). This gendered food agency has been found among adolescents in other countries in food environments classified as traditional(Reference Neufeld, Andrade and Ballonoff Suleiman36).
This study aimed to help fill significant evidence gaps about adolescent dietary practices in northern Nigeria to inform future USAID investments in the region. Our findings confirm those from other contexts that nutrition projects need to be tailored for adolescents and account for local sociocultural and gender norms. Our findings also confirm the need to address the multifaceted factors that influence adolescent diets, including to strengthen food environments and reinforce social and family support for healthy adolescent diets(Reference Neufeld, Andrade and Ballonoff Suleiman36,Reference Hargreaves, Mates and Menon44,Reference Blum, Khan and Sultana45) . Interventions should value and enhance adolescents’ embodied nutrition knowledge, engage adolescents as change agents and bolster adolescent agency(Reference Varela, Rosso and Moura46). Our findings also point to pregnant adolescent girls 15–19 years as a particularly vulnerable adolescent group in northern Nigeria that projects should engage.
The relatively small number of sites limited this study, and it may not reflect the diversity in the three states, particularly experiences of communities living in remote or insecure areas. There may have been response bias related to social desirability or to garner project support. In addition, we collected limited demographic information about participants and did not measure food security. Future studies should conduct dietary recalls with a representative sample of adolescents, disaggregate data for married and unmarried older adolescent girls, include husbands of adolescent girls in data collection and use participant observation to further explore dietary practices and sociocultural and gender norms.
Conclusion
Our findings contribute to the limited evidence base on adolescent dietary practices and their drivers in northern Nigeria and in low- and middle-income countries more broadly. We explored the interplay between and the complexity of factors in Patton et al.’s framework on adolescent eating behaviour. We found that adolescents’ embodied experience and knowledge – related to nutrition and taste – produced key ways of knowing that shaped their food choice. Their home food environment and sociocultural and gender norms shaped and circumscribed their agency to choose what and how to eat. We recommend further research on adolescent dietary practice in northern Nigeria and use of these findings to inform future project design, including by strengthening adolescents’ embodied knowledge, food environment and social support for healthy diets.
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank the adolescents and members of the community in Bauchi, Kebbi and Sokoto States who participated in the study. The authors express their gratitude to the IPSOS Nigeria team for conducting the focus group discussions and administering the Diet Quality Questionnaire with high professionalism. The authors would also like to acknowledge the Emergency Nutrition Network for supporting them during the literature review phase as they developed the protocol for this study. Finally, the authors would like to thank Silvia Alayon for contributing to coding and Hadiza Joy Marcus, Alysa Grude and Lisa Sherburne for providing feedback on the manuscript.
Financial support
The research is supported by the US Agency for International Development (USAID; contract number 7200AA18C00070; USAID Advancing Nutrition).
Conflicts of interest
There are no conflicts of interest.
Authorship
A. C. and A. S. led the conceptualisation, data analysis and writing of the manuscript. S. N. and U. I. oversaw implementation of the study and contributed to writing sections of the manuscript. S. M. analysed and contributed to sections of the manuscript. M. D. E. contributed to sections of the manuscript. All authors reviewed the final manuscript.
Ethics of human subject participation
The current study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki, and all procedures involving research study participants were approved by the John Snow International Institutional Review Board (IRB No. 22-73), Ministry of Health in Bauchi State (BSMOH/REC/066/2022), Kebbi State (KSHREC 107:043/2022) and Sokoto State (SKHREC/071/2022). Verbal consent was obtained from all subjects. Verbal consent was witnessed and formally recorded.
Supplementary material
For supplementary material/s referred to in this article, please visit https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980024001460