Briefel Ronette, Hanson Charlotte, Fox Mary Kay, Novak Timothy, Ziegler Paula
Mathematica Policy Research Inc., 600 Maryland Avenue SW, Suite 550, Washington, DC 20024, USA.
J Am Diet Assoc. 2006 Jan;106(1 Suppl 1):S52-65. doi: 10.1016/j.jada.2005.09.041.
To report the prevalence of dietary supplement use in a random sample of US infants 4 to 24 months of age, and to compare demographic characteristics, usual nutrient intakes, and food patterns of supplement users and nonusers.
Data from 24-hour recalls collected for the 2002 Feeding Infants and Toddlers Study were analyzed. Recalls included nutrient contributions from dietary supplements as well as all foods and beverages. We estimated usual energy and nutrient intakes of supplement users and nonusers, as well as the prevalence of nutrient adequacy and excess in the two groups. We also compared demographic characteristics and food patterns of supplement users and nonusers and, for supplement users, estimated the proportion of total intake provided by foods and the proportion provided by supplements.
A national random sample of 3,022 infants and toddlers age 4 to 24 months, including 430 vitamin and/or mineral supplement users and 2,592 nonusers.
We compared means, percentile distributions, and proportions by age and supplement subgroup, and applied the Dietary Reference Intakes to assess usual nutrient intakes. We conducted regression analysis to determine which population characteristics predict the use of dietary supplements in this population.
Overall, 8% of infants age 4 to 5 months received some type of dietary supplement. The prevalence of supplement use increased with age, to 19% among infants 6 to 11 months and 31% among toddlers 12 to 24 months. The vast majority of supplement users (97%) received only one type of supplement, most commonly a multivitamin and/or mineral supplement. Vitamin/mineral supplement use among infants and toddlers was associated with being a first-born child and being reported by the primary caretaker as being a picky eater. Characteristics that were independent predictors of supplement use were living in the Northeast, being male, and living in a household with fewer children. We found no significant differences between supplement users and nonusers in mean daily intakes of nutrients or nutrient density from foods alone, and few differences in food consumption. Overall, the prevalence of inadequate intakes was low (<1% to 2%). However, 65% of supplement nonusers and 9% of supplement users had vitamin E intakes less than the Estimated Average Requirement. Excessive intakes (ie, intakes above the Tolerable Upper Intake Level) were noted for both supplement users and nonusers for vitamin A (97% and 15% of toddlers) and zinc (60% and 59% of older infants and 68% and 38% of toddlers) as well as for folate among supplement users (18% of toddlers).
Generally, healthy infants and toddlers can achieve recommended levels of intake from food alone. Dietetics professionals should encourage caregivers to use foods rather than supplements as the primary source of nutrients in children's diets. Vitamin and mineral supplements can help infants and toddlers with special nutrient needs or marginal intakes achieve adequate intakes, but care must be taken to ensure that supplements do not lead to excessive intakes. This is especially important for nutrients that are widely used as food fortificants, including vitamin A, zinc, and folate.
报告美国4至24个月大婴儿随机样本中膳食补充剂的使用情况,并比较补充剂使用者和非使用者的人口统计学特征、通常的营养素摄入量及食物模式。
对2002年喂养婴幼儿研究收集的24小时膳食回顾数据进行分析。膳食回顾包括膳食补充剂以及所有食物和饮料的营养素贡献。我们估计了补充剂使用者和非使用者通常的能量和营养素摄入量,以及两组中营养素充足和过量的发生率。我们还比较了补充剂使用者和非使用者的人口统计学特征及食物模式,对于补充剂使用者,估计了食物提供的总摄入量比例和补充剂提供的比例。
全国3022名4至24个月大的婴幼儿随机样本,包括430名维生素和/或矿物质补充剂使用者及2592名非使用者。
我们按年龄和补充剂亚组比较了均值、百分位数分布和比例,并应用膳食参考摄入量评估通常的营养素摄入量。我们进行回归分析以确定哪些人口特征可预测该人群中膳食补充剂的使用情况。
总体而言,4至5个月大的婴儿中有8%接受了某种类型的膳食补充剂。补充剂的使用发生率随年龄增加,6至11个月大的婴儿中为19%,12至24个月大的幼儿中为31%。绝大多数补充剂使用者(97%)仅使用一种补充剂,最常见的是多种维生素和/或矿物质补充剂。婴幼儿使用维生素/矿物质补充剂与是头胎以及主要照顾者报告为挑食者有关。补充剂使用的独立预测因素包括居住在东北部、为男性以及生活在孩子较少的家庭。我们发现补充剂使用者和非使用者在仅从食物中摄入的营养素平均每日摄入量或营养素密度方面无显著差异,在食物消费方面差异也很少。总体而言,摄入不足的发生率较低(<1%至2%)。然而,65%的非补充剂使用者和9%的补充剂使用者维生素E摄入量低于估计平均需求量。补充剂使用者和非使用者中均有维生素A(97%的幼儿和15%的幼儿)、锌(60%的较大婴儿和59%的幼儿以及68%的幼儿和38%的幼儿)以及补充剂使用者中的叶酸(18%的幼儿)摄入过量(即摄入量高于可耐受最高摄入量水平)。
一般来说,健康的婴幼儿仅通过食物就能达到推荐的摄入量水平。营养专业人员应鼓励照顾者将食物而非补充剂作为儿童饮食中营养素的主要来源。维生素和矿物质补充剂可帮助有特殊营养需求或摄入量处于边缘水平的婴幼儿达到充足摄入量,但必须注意确保补充剂不会导致摄入过量。对于广泛用作食品强化剂的营养素,包括维生素A、锌和叶酸,这一点尤为重要。