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Maternal Multiple Micronutrient Supplements and Child Cognition: A Randomized Trial in Indonesia

Authors :
Elizabeth L. Prado
Anuraj H. Shankar
Husni Muadz
Katherine J. Alcock
Michael T. Ullman
Source :
Pediatrics. 130:e536-e546
Publication Year :
2012
Publisher :
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP), 2012.

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: We investigated the relative benefit of maternal multiple micronutrient (MMN) supplementation during pregnancy and until 3 months postpartum compared with iron/folic acid supplementation on child development at preschool age (42 months). METHODS: We assessed 487 children of mothers who participated in the Supplementation with Multiple Micronutrients Intervention Trial, a cluster-randomized trial in Indonesia, on tests adapted and validated in the local context measuring motor, language, visual attention/spatial, executive, and socioemotional abilities. Analysis was according to intention to treat. RESULTS: In children of undernourished mothers (mid-upper arm circumference CONCLUSIONS: When pregnant women are undernourished or anemic, provision of MMN supplements can improve the motor and cognitive abilities of their children up to 3.5 years later, particularly for both motor function and visual attention/spatial ability. Maternal MMN but not iron/folic acid supplementation protected children from the detrimental effects of maternal undernutrition on child motor and cognitive development.

Details

ISSN :
10984275 and 00314005
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e5c089484ba8419c6f09686a93f7e3e9