Reidy Kathleen C, Bailey Regan Lucas, Deming Denise M, O'Neill Lynda, Carr B Thomas, Lesniauskas Ruta, Johnson Wendy
is head, Nutrition Science for Baby Food, Nestlé Infant Nutrition, Global R&D, where she leads the Feeding Infants and Toddlers Studies globally. She received her bachelor of science degree from Cornell University and master of public health and doctor of public health degrees from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
is an associate professor in the Department of Nutrition Science at Purdue University and previously was a nutritional epidemiologist and director of Career Development and Outreach at the Office of Dietary Supplements, Office of Disease Prevention, at the National Institutes of Health. Dr Bailey received her doctor of philosophy degree in nutrition science from The Pennsylvania State University and completed a master of public health degree from Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University.
Nutr Today. 2018 Mar;53(2):68-78. doi: 10.1097/NT.0000000000000265. Epub 2018 Mar 22.
Nutrition is critically important in the first 1000 days, and while most American babies are fed commercial baby foods, there is little or no evidence from nationally representative data to understand the implications of such consumption. We used 24-hour dietary recall data for 505 infants from The Feeding Infants and Toddlers Study to describe food consumption patterns and micronutrient density of complementary foods consumed by infants fed commercially prepared baby food fruit, vegetables, and dinners and compared with those eaten by nonconsumers of these products. Results show that consumers were significantly more likely to report eating all vegetables (excluding white potatoes, 71% vs 51%), deep yellow vegetables (42% vs 18%), and fruits (79% vs 65%) and were less likely to report eating white potatoes (10% vs 24%), dark green vegetables (4% vs 20%), and sweets (23% vs 47%) than were nonconsumers. Nutrient density of the complementary foods of consumers was greater for fiber, potassium, vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E, and magnesium, but lower in sodium and vitamin D. We conclude that infants fed commercially prepared baby foods were more likely to eat vegetables and fruits, and their diets were higher in several micronutrients. These findings provide important insights on complementary feeding and are useful to support the development of evidence-based infant-feeding guidelines.
营养在生命最初的1000天里至关重要,虽然大多数美国婴儿食用商业婴儿食品,但从全国代表性数据中几乎没有证据来了解这种消费的影响。我们使用了来自婴幼儿喂养研究的505名婴儿的24小时饮食回忆数据,来描述食用商业制备的婴儿食品水果、蔬菜和晚餐的婴儿所食用的辅食的食物消费模式和微量营养素密度,并与未食用这些产品的婴儿所吃的食物进行比较。结果显示,与未食用者相比,食用者报告食用所有蔬菜(不包括白土豆,71%对51%)、深黄色蔬菜(42%对18%)和水果(79%对65%)的可能性显著更高,而报告食用白土豆(10%对24%)、深绿色蔬菜(4%对20%)和甜食(23%对47%)的可能性更低。食用者的辅食中纤维、钾、维生素A、维生素C、维生素E和镁的营养密度更高,但钠和维生素D的含量更低。我们得出结论,食用商业制备婴儿食品的婴儿更有可能食用蔬菜和水果,并且他们的饮食中几种微量营养素含量更高。这些发现为辅食喂养提供了重要见解,有助于支持制定基于证据的婴儿喂养指南。