1. Infant feeding practices and determinant variables for early complementary feeding in the first 8 months of life: results from the Brazilian MAL-ED cohort site.
- Author
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Maciel, Bll, Moraes, M L, Soares, A M, Cruz, Ifs, de Andrade, Mir, Filho, J Q, Junior, F S, Costa, P N, Abreu, C B, Ambikapathi, R, Guerrant, R L, Caulfield, L E, and Lima, Aam
- Subjects
BREASTFEEDING ,INFANT formulas ,INFANTS ,INFANT nutrition ,INFANT weaning ,METROPOLITAN areas ,NUTRITIONAL requirements ,TIME ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
Objective: The present study aimed to describe breast-feeding, complementary feeding and determining factors for early complementary feeding from birth to 8 months of age in a typical Brazilian low-income urban community.Design: A birth cohort was conducted (n 233), with data collection twice weekly, allowing close observation of breast-feeding, complementary feeding introduction and description of the WHO core indicators on infant and young child feeding. Infant feeding practices were related to socio-economic status (SES), assessed by Water/sanitation, wealth measured by a set of eight Assets, Maternal education and monthly household Income (WAMI index). Two logistic regression models were constructed to evaluate risk factors associated with early complementary feeding.Results: Based on twice weekly follow-up, 65 % of the children received exclusive breast-feeding in the first month of life and 5 % in the sixth month. Complementary feeding was offered in the first month: 29 % of the children received water, 15 % infant formulas, 13 % other milks and 9·4 % grain-derived foods. At 6 months, dietary diversity and minimum acceptable diet were both 47 % and these increased to 69 % at 8 months. No breast-feeding within the first hour of birth was a risk factor for the early introduction of water (adjusted OR=4·68; 95 % CI 1·33, 16·47) and low WAMI index a risk factor for the early introduction of other milks (adjusted OR=0·00; 95 % CI 0·00, 0·02).Conclusions: Data suggest local policies should promote: (i) early breast-feeding initiation; (ii) SES, considering maternal education, income and household conditions; (iii) timely introduction of complementary feeding; and (iv) dietary diversity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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