academicAugust 4, 2020
Stable isotopes in hair reveal dietary protein sources with links to socioeconomic status and health
Carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios in hair sampled from 65 communities across the central and intermountain regions of the United States and more intensively throughout 29 ZIP codes in the Salt Lake Valley, Utah, revealed a dietary divergence related to socioeconomic status as measured by cost of living, household income, and adjusted gross income.
Carbon and nitrogen isotope ratios in hair sampled from 65 communities
across the central and intermountain regions of the United States and
more intensively throughout 29 [ZIP]{.caps} codes in the Salt Lake
Valley, Utah, revealed a dietary divergence related to socioeconomic
status as measured by cost of living, household income, and adjusted
gross income. Corn-fed, animal-derived proteins were more common in the
diets of lower socioeconomic status populations than were plant-derived
proteins, with individual estimates of animal-derived protein diets as
high as 75%; United States towns and cities averaged 57%. Similar
patterns were seen across the socioeconomic status spectrum in the Salt
Lake Valley. It is likely that corn-fed animal proteins were associated
with concentrated animal-feeding operations, a common practice for
industrial animal production in the United States today. Given recent
studies highlighting the negative impacts of animal-derived proteins in
our diets, hair carbon isotope ratios could provide an approach for
scaling assessments of animal-sourced foods and health risks in
communities across the United States.