1School of Science and Health,University of Western Sydney,Penrith,NSW 2751,Australia.
2School of Medicine,University of Western Sydney,Penrith,New South Wales,Australia.
Public Health Nutr. 2015 Mar;18(4):669-78. doi: 10.1017/S1368980014000834. Epub 2014 May 20.
To explore complementary feeding practices and identify potential risk factors associated with inadequate complementary feeding practices in Ghana by using the newly developed WHO infant feeding indicators and data from the nationally representative 2008 Ghana Demographic and Health Survey.
The source of data for the analysis was the 2008 Ghana Demographic and Health Survey. Analysis of the factors associated with inadequate complementary feeding, using individual-, household- and community-level determinants, was done by performing multiple logistic regression modelling.
Ghana.
Children (n 822) aged 6-23 months.
The prevalence of the introduction of solid, semi-solid or soft foods among infants aged 6-8 months was 72.6 % (95 % CI 64.6 %, 79.3 %). The proportion of children aged 6-23 months who met the minimum meal frequency and dietary diversity for breast-fed and non-breast-fed children was 46.0 % (95 % CI 42.3 %, 49.9 %) and 51.4 % (95 % CI 47.4 %, 55.3 %) respectively and the prevalence of minimum acceptable diet for breast-fed children was 29.9 % (95 % CI 26.1 %, 34.1 %). Multivariate analysis revealed that children from the other administrative regions were less likely to meet minimum dietary diversity, meal frequency and acceptable diet than those from the Volta region. Household poverty, children whose mothers perceived their size to be smaller than average and children who were delivered at home were significantly less likely to meet the minimum dietary diversity requirement; and children whose mothers did not have any postnatal check-ups were significantly less likely to meet the requirement for minimum acceptable diet. Complementary feeding was significantly lower in infants from illiterate mothers (adjusted OR=3.55; 95 % CI 1.05, 12.02).
The prevalence of complementary feeding among children in Ghana is still below the WHO-recommended standard of 90 % coverage. Non-attendance of postnatal check-up by mothers, cultural beliefs and habits, household poverty, home delivery of babies and non-Christian mothers were the most important risk factors for inadequate complementary feeding practices. Therefore, nutrition educational interventions to improve complementary feeding practices should target these factors in order to achieve the fourth Millennium Development Goal.
利用新制定的世卫组织婴儿喂养指标和 2008 年加纳全国人口与健康调查的代表性数据,探讨加纳婴儿辅食添加实践情况,并确定与辅食添加不足相关的潜在危险因素。
本分析的数据来源于 2008 年加纳人口与健康调查。采用个体、家庭和社区水平的决定因素,对与辅食添加不足相关的因素进行多因素逻辑回归建模分析。
加纳。
822 名 6-23 月龄儿童。
6-8 月龄婴儿引入固体、半固体或软食物的比例为 72.6%(95%CI:64.6%,79.3%)。6-23 月龄儿童达到母乳喂养和非母乳喂养儿童最低喂养次数和饮食多样性要求的比例分别为 46.0%(95%CI:42.3%,49.9%)和 51.4%(95%CI:47.4%,55.3%),母乳喂养儿童达到最低可接受饮食的比例为 29.9%(95%CI:26.1%,34.1%)。多变量分析显示,与沃尔特地区相比,来自其他行政区的儿童达到最低饮食多样性、喂养次数和可接受饮食的比例更低。家庭贫困、母亲认为孩子体型小于平均水平和在家中分娩的儿童,满足最低饮食多样性要求的可能性显著降低;母亲没有进行任何产后检查的儿童,满足最低可接受饮食要求的可能性显著降低。母亲不识字的婴儿辅食添加比例明显更低(调整后的 OR=3.55;95%CI:1.05,12.02)。
加纳儿童辅食添加率仍低于世卫组织建议的 90%覆盖率标准。母亲不参加产后检查、文化信仰和习惯、家庭贫困、在家分娩和非基督教母亲是辅食添加不足的最重要危险因素。因此,为实现第四个千年发展目标,应针对这些因素开展营养教育干预,以改善辅食添加实践。