Department of Paediatrics, University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia; Paediatric and Child Health Research Group, University Malaya, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Department of Paediatrics, University Malaya Medical Centre, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Pediatr Neonatol. 2019 Dec;60(6):676-683. doi: 10.1016/j.pedneo.2019.04.004. Epub 2019 Apr 13.
Parents often express concerns about feeding difficulties in their child. We hypothesized that these parental concerns were associated with adverse growth status in early childhood. We aimed to determine the prevalence of such concerns and whether these concerns were associated with adverse growth status in early childhood.
We performed a cross-sectional study among healthy children aged 12-36 months attending three well-baby clinics in three urban areas in Malaysia and Singapore between December 2016 and February 2017. Parents were interviewed for concerns about their child's feeding and presence of behavioral and organic red flags for feeding difficulties. We defined growth faltering as weight-for-age < 3rd centile and short stature as height-for-age < 3rd centile according to World Health Organization Growth Standards.
Of the 303 children studied (boys = 160, 52.8%; mean [± SD] chronological age at interview 21.3 [± 4.0] months), 13% (n = 38/292) had growth faltering and 19.5% (n = 50/256) had short stature. Overall, 36.3% (n = 110) of parents expressed concerns about their child's feeding behavior. Sixty-eight percent (n = 206) of parents reported presence of at least one behavioral and 18.5% (n = 56) had at least one organic red flag for feeding difficulties, respectively. 9.9% (n = 30) had both behavioral and organic red flags for feeding difficulties. Growth faltering was significantly associated with parental concern about feeding (odds ratio [OR] 3.049, p < 0.001), food refusal (OR 4.047, p < 0.001) and presence of at least one organic red flag (OR 2.625, p = 0.012).
We found that parental concerns about their child's feeding to be common. Presence of parental concern, food refusal in the child and presence of organic red flags for feeding difficulties are associated growth faltering in early childhood.
父母经常对孩子的喂养困难表示担忧。我们假设这些父母的担忧与儿童早期的不良生长状况有关。我们旨在确定这些担忧的发生率,以及这些担忧是否与儿童早期的不良生长状况有关。
我们在马来西亚和新加坡的三个城市的三个常规婴儿诊所进行了一项横断面研究,纳入了 2016 年 12 月至 2017 年 2 月期间 12-36 个月龄的健康儿童。对父母进行了有关其子女喂养的担忧以及是否存在喂养困难的行为和器质性红旗的访谈。我们根据世界卫生组织生长标准,将体重低于年龄的第 3 百分位定义为体重不足,身高低于年龄的第 3 百分位定义为身材矮小。
在 303 名研究儿童中(男孩 160 名,占 52.8%;访谈时的平均(±标准差)年龄为 21.3(±4.0)个月),13%(38/292)存在体重不足,19.5%(50/256)存在身材矮小。总的来说,36.3%(110/292)的父母对孩子的喂养行为表示担忧。68%(206/292)的父母报告存在至少一种行为性红旗,18.5%(56/292)至少有一种器质性红旗。9.9%(29/292)既有行为性红旗又有器质性红旗。体重不足与父母对喂养的担忧显著相关(比值比 [OR] 3.049,p<0.001)、拒食(OR 4.047,p<0.001)和至少存在一种器质性红旗(OR 2.625,p=0.012)。
我们发现父母对孩子喂养的担忧很常见。父母的担忧、孩子的拒食以及喂养困难的器质性红旗的存在与儿童早期的体重不足有关。