Department of Pediatrics, Indira Gandhi Government Medical College, Nagpur, India.
Matern Child Nutr. 2012 Jan;8 Suppl 1(Suppl 1):28-44. doi: 10.1111/j.1740-8709.2011.00385.x.
In India, poor feeding practices in early childhood contribute to the burden of malnutrition as well as infant and child mortality. This paper aims to use the newly developed World Health Organization (WHO) infant feeding indicators to determine the prevalence of complementary feeding indicators among children of 6-23 months of age and to identify the determinants of inappropriate complementary feeding practices in India. The study data on 15,028 last-born children aged 6-23 months was obtained from the National Family Health Survey 2005-2006. Inappropriate complementary feeding indicators were examined against a set of child, parental, household, health service and community level characteristics. The prevalence of timely introduction of complementary feeding among infants aged 6-8 months was 55%. Among children aged 6-23 months, minimum dietary diversity rate was 15.2%, minimum meal frequency 41.5% and minimum acceptable diet 9.2%. Children in northern and western geographical regions of India had higher odds for inappropriate complementary feeding indicators than in other geographical regions. Richest households were less likely to delay introduction of complementary foods than other households. Other determinants of not meeting minimum dietary diversity and minimum acceptable diet were: no maternal education, lower maternal Body Mass Index (BMI) (<18.5 kg/m(2)), lower wealth index, less frequent (<7) antenatal clinic visits, lack of post-natal visits and poor exposure to media. A very low proportion of children aged 6-23 months in India received adequate complementary foods as measured by the WHO indicators.
在印度,幼儿时期不良的喂养习惯不仅导致营养不足,还导致婴儿和儿童死亡率上升。本文旨在利用新开发的世界卫生组织(WHO)婴儿喂养指标,确定 6-23 个月儿童补充喂养指标的流行情况,并确定印度不适当补充喂养行为的决定因素。该研究的数据来源于 2005-2006 年的全国家庭健康调查,涉及 15028 名 6-23 个月大的最后出生的儿童。针对一系列儿童、父母、家庭、卫生服务和社区层面的特征,对不适当的补充喂养指标进行了检查。6-8 个月大的婴儿及时引入补充喂养的比例为 55%。在 6-23 个月大的儿童中,最低饮食多样性率为 15.2%,最低用餐频率为 41.5%,最低可接受饮食为 9.2%。印度北部和西部地理区域的儿童比其他地理区域的儿童更容易出现不适当的补充喂养指标。最富裕的家庭比其他家庭更不可能延迟引入补充食品。不符合最低饮食多样性和最低可接受饮食的其他决定因素包括:母亲没有接受教育、母亲的身体质量指数(BMI)较低(<18.5kg/m2)、较低的财富指数、较少的产前检查次数(<7 次)、缺乏产后访视以及媒体接触度低。在印度,只有极少数 6-23 个月大的儿童获得了足够的补充食品,这是按照 WHO 指标衡量的。