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Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study

A nationally generalisable cohort (n 5770) was used to determine the prevalence of non-timely (early/late) introduction of complementary food and core food groups and associations with maternal sociodemographic and health behaviours in New Zealand (NZ). Variables describing maternal characteristics...

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Autores principales: Ferreira, Sara Silva, Marchioni, Dirce Maria Lobo, Wall, Clare Rosemary, Gerritsen, Sarah, Teixeira, Juliana Araujo, Grant, Cameron C., Morton, Susan M. B., Gontijo de Castro, Teresa
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Cambridge University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9876814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35403582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S000711452200112X
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author Ferreira, Sara Silva
Marchioni, Dirce Maria Lobo
Wall, Clare Rosemary
Gerritsen, Sarah
Teixeira, Juliana Araujo
Grant, Cameron C.
Morton, Susan M. B.
Gontijo de Castro, Teresa
author_facet Ferreira, Sara Silva
Marchioni, Dirce Maria Lobo
Wall, Clare Rosemary
Gerritsen, Sarah
Teixeira, Juliana Araujo
Grant, Cameron C.
Morton, Susan M. B.
Gontijo de Castro, Teresa
author_sort Ferreira, Sara Silva
collection PubMed
description A nationally generalisable cohort (n 5770) was used to determine the prevalence of non-timely (early/late) introduction of complementary food and core food groups and associations with maternal sociodemographic and health behaviours in New Zealand (NZ). Variables describing maternal characteristics and infant food introduction were sourced, respectively, from interviews completed antenatally and during late infancy. The NZ Infant Feeding Guidelines were used to define early (≤ 4 months) and late (≥ 7 months) introduction. Associations were examined using multivariable multinomial regression, presented as adjusted relative risk ratios and 95 % confidence intervals (RRR; 95% CI). Complementary food introduction was early for 40·2 % and late for 3·2 %. The prevalence of early food group introduction were fruit/vegetables (23·8 %), breads/cereals (36·3 %), iron-rich foods (34·1 %) and of late were meat/meat alternatives (45·9 %), dairy products (46·2 %) and fruits/vegetables (9·9 %). Compared with infants with timely food introduction, risk of early food introduction was increased for infants: breastfed < 6months (2·52; 2·19–2·90), whose mothers were < 30 years old (1·69; 1·46–1·94), had a diploma/trade certificate v. tertiary education (1·39; 1·1–1·70), of Māori v. European ethnicity (1·40; 1·12–1·75) or smoked during pregnancy (1·88; 1·44–2·46). Risk of late food introduction decreased for infants breastfed < 6 months (0·47; 0.27–0·80) and increased for infants whose mothers had secondary v. tertiary education (2·04; 1·16–3·60) were of Asian v. European ethnicity (2·22; 1·35, 3·63) or did not attend childbirth preparation classes (2·23; 1·24–4·01). Non-timely food introduction, specifically early food introduction, is prevalent in NZ. Interventions to improve food introduction timeliness should be ethnic-specific and support longer breast-feeding.
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spelling pubmed-98768142023-02-02 Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study Ferreira, Sara Silva Marchioni, Dirce Maria Lobo Wall, Clare Rosemary Gerritsen, Sarah Teixeira, Juliana Araujo Grant, Cameron C. Morton, Susan M. B. Gontijo de Castro, Teresa Br J Nutr Research Article A nationally generalisable cohort (n 5770) was used to determine the prevalence of non-timely (early/late) introduction of complementary food and core food groups and associations with maternal sociodemographic and health behaviours in New Zealand (NZ). Variables describing maternal characteristics and infant food introduction were sourced, respectively, from interviews completed antenatally and during late infancy. The NZ Infant Feeding Guidelines were used to define early (≤ 4 months) and late (≥ 7 months) introduction. Associations were examined using multivariable multinomial regression, presented as adjusted relative risk ratios and 95 % confidence intervals (RRR; 95% CI). Complementary food introduction was early for 40·2 % and late for 3·2 %. The prevalence of early food group introduction were fruit/vegetables (23·8 %), breads/cereals (36·3 %), iron-rich foods (34·1 %) and of late were meat/meat alternatives (45·9 %), dairy products (46·2 %) and fruits/vegetables (9·9 %). Compared with infants with timely food introduction, risk of early food introduction was increased for infants: breastfed < 6months (2·52; 2·19–2·90), whose mothers were < 30 years old (1·69; 1·46–1·94), had a diploma/trade certificate v. tertiary education (1·39; 1·1–1·70), of Māori v. European ethnicity (1·40; 1·12–1·75) or smoked during pregnancy (1·88; 1·44–2·46). Risk of late food introduction decreased for infants breastfed < 6 months (0·47; 0.27–0·80) and increased for infants whose mothers had secondary v. tertiary education (2·04; 1·16–3·60) were of Asian v. European ethnicity (2·22; 1·35, 3·63) or did not attend childbirth preparation classes (2·23; 1·24–4·01). Non-timely food introduction, specifically early food introduction, is prevalent in NZ. Interventions to improve food introduction timeliness should be ethnic-specific and support longer breast-feeding. Cambridge University Press 2023-02-14 2022-04-11 /pmc/articles/PMC9876814/ /pubmed/35403582 http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S000711452200112X Text en © The Author(s) 2022 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ferreira, Sara Silva
Marchioni, Dirce Maria Lobo
Wall, Clare Rosemary
Gerritsen, Sarah
Teixeira, Juliana Araujo
Grant, Cameron C.
Morton, Susan M. B.
Gontijo de Castro, Teresa
Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study
title Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study
title_full Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study
title_fullStr Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study
title_short Prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the Growing Up in New Zealand cohort study
title_sort prevalence and maternal determinants of early and late introduction of complementary foods: results from the growing up in new zealand cohort study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9876814/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35403582
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S000711452200112X
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