Department of Psychology, University of California, Merced, California, USA.
Department of Health, Society, and Behavior, University of California, Irvine, California, USA.
Matern Child Nutr. 2023 Jul;19(3):e13498. doi: 10.1111/mcn.13498. Epub 2023 Mar 22.
The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic increased food insecurity among US households, however, little is known about how infants, who rely primarily on human milk and/or infant formula, were impacted. We conducted an online survey with US caregivers of infants under 2 years of age (N = 319) to assess how the COVID-19 pandemic impacted breastfeeding, formula-feeding and household ability to obtain infant-feeding supplies and lactation support (68% mothers; 66% White; 8% living in poverty). We found that 31% of families who used infant formula indicated that they experienced various challenges in obtaining infant formula, citing the following top three reasons: the formula was sold out (20%), they had to travel to multiple stores (21%) or formula was too expensive (8%). In response, 33% of families who used formula reported resorting to deleterious formula-feeding practices such as diluting formula with extra water (11%) or cereal (10%), preparing smaller bottles (8%) or saving leftover mixed bottles for later (11%). Of the families who fed infants human milk, 53% reported feeding changes directly as a result of the pandemic, for example, 46% increased their provisioning of human milk due to perceived benefits for the infant's immune system (37%), ability to work remotely/stay home (31%), concerns about money (9%) or formula shortages (8%). Fifteen percent of families who fed human milk reported that they did not receive the lactation support they needed and 4.8% stopped breastfeeding. To protect infant food and nutrition security, our results underscore the need for policies to support breastfeeding and ensure equitable and reliable access to infant formula.
新型冠状病毒肺炎(COVID-19)大流行增加了美国家庭的粮食不安全,然而,对于主要依赖人乳和/或婴儿配方的婴儿受到了怎样的影响,人们知之甚少。我们对 319 名 2 岁以下婴儿的美国家庭照顾者进行了一项在线调查,以评估 COVID-19 大流行如何影响母乳喂养、配方奶喂养以及家庭获取婴儿喂养用品和哺乳支持的能力(68%的母亲;66%的白人;8%生活贫困)。我们发现,31%使用婴儿配方奶粉的家庭表示,他们在获得婴儿配方奶粉方面遇到了各种挑战,原因如下:配方奶粉售罄(20%)、他们不得不去多家商店(21%)或配方奶粉太贵(8%)。作为回应,33%使用配方奶粉的家庭报告说,他们采取了有害的配方奶喂养措施,例如用额外的水(11%)或谷物(10%)稀释配方奶、准备较小的奶瓶(8%)或储存剩余的混合奶瓶以备后用(11%)。在母乳喂养婴儿的家庭中,53%报告说直接因大流行而改变了喂养方式,例如,46%增加了人乳供应,因为他们认为人乳对婴儿的免疫系统(37%)、远程工作/留在家中的能力(31%)、对金钱的担忧(9%)或配方奶粉短缺(8%)有好处。15%母乳喂养的家庭报告说他们没有得到所需的哺乳支持,4.8%的家庭停止了母乳喂养。为了保护婴儿的食品和营养安全,我们的研究结果强调需要制定政策来支持母乳喂养,并确保公平和可靠地获得婴儿配方奶粉。