1. Systematic review of infant and young child complementary feeding practices in South Asian families: the India perspective
- Author
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Logan Manikam, Ankita Prasad, Abina Dharmaratnam, Christy Moen, Alexandra Robinson, Alexander Light, Sonia Ahmed, Raghu Lingam, and Monica Lakhanpaul
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice ,Culture ,India ,Mothers ,Nutritional Status ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Weaning ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Infant Nutritional Physiological Phenomena ,Meals ,Review Articles ,030109 nutrition & dietetics ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Infant, Newborn ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Infant ,Feeding Behavior ,Diet ,Breast Feeding ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Infant Care ,Infant Food - Abstract
ObjectiveSuboptimal nutrition among children remains a problem among South Asian (SA) families. Appropriate complementary feeding (CF) practices can greatly reduce this risk. Thus, we undertook a systematic review of studies assessing CF (timing, dietary diversity, meal frequency and influencing factors) in children aged DesignSearches between January 2000 and June 2016 in MEDLINE, EMBASE, Global Health, Web of Science, OVID Maternity & Infant Care, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, BanglaJOL, POPLINE and WHO Global Health Library. Eligibility criteria: primary research on CF practices in SA children aged 0–2 years and/or their families. Search terms: ‘children’, ‘feeding’ and ‘Asians’ and derivatives. Two researchers undertook study selection, data extraction and quality appraisal (EPPI-Centre Weight of Evidence).ResultsFrom 45 712 abstracts screened, sixty-four cross-sectional, seven cohort, one qualitative and one case–control studies were included. Despite adopting the WHO Infant and Young Child Feeding guidelines, suboptimal CF practices were found in all studies. In twenty-nine of fifty-nine studies, CF was introduced between 6 and 9 months, with eight studies finding minimum dietary diversity was achieved in 6–33 %, and ten of seventeen studies noting minimum meal frequency in only 25–50 % of the study populations. Influencing factors included cultural influences, poor knowledge on appropriate CF practices and parental educational status.ConclusionsThis is the first systematic review to evaluate CF practices in SA in India. Campaigns to change health and nutrition behaviour and revision of nationwide child health nutrition programmes are needed to meet the substantial unmet needs of these children.
- Published
- 2017
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