| Literature DB >> 22151789 |
Barbara Crocker1, Tim J Green, Susan I Barr, Bridgid Beckingham, Radhika Bhagat, Beata Dabrowska, Rachel Douthwaite, Carmen Evanson, Russell Friesen, Kathy Hydamaka, Wangyang Li, Kelly Simmons, Lillian Tse.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vitamin D deficiency during infancy may lead to rickets and possibly other poor health outcomes. The World Health Organization recommends exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months. Breast milk is the best food for infants but does not contain adequate vitamin D. Health Canada recommends all breastfed infants receive a daily vitamin D supplement of 400 IU; however, there appears to be limited current Canadian data as to whether parents or caregivers are following this advice. The aim of this study was to determine the rates of vitamin D supplementation among 2-month old infants in Vancouver and Richmond, British Columbia, Canada.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22151789 PMCID: PMC3265491 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Participant flow and follow-up.
Participant characteristics
| Characteristic | % ( |
|---|---|
| Maternal Age | |
| < 31 | 33.3 (192) |
| ≥31 | 66.7 (385) |
| Baby's ethnicity | |
| European | 36.7 (212) |
| Chinese | 31.2 (180) |
| Other1 | 32.1 (185) |
| Annual family income | |
| <$40,000 | 19.6 (113) |
| $40,000-59,000 | 11.3 (65) |
| $60,000-80,000 | 10.4 (60) |
| >$80,000 | 37.4 (216) |
| Unknown2 | 21.3 (123) |
| Education | |
| < High school | 0.3 (2) |
| Some and completed high school | 12.5 (72) |
| Some trade/vocational training and college/university | 8.8 (51) |
| Completed trade/vocational training and college/university | 78.3 (452) |
| Parity | |
| Primipara | 52.0 (300) |
| Multipara | 48.0 (277) |
| Baby's gender | |
| Male | 50.6 (292) |
| Female | 49.4 (285) |
| Marital status | |
| Single | 4.9 (28) |
| Married | 85.6 (494) |
| Common-law | 8.5 (49) |
| Other | 1.0 (6) |
1South Asian 42.0% (63), South East Asian 42.7% (64), Korean 6.0% (9), Japanese 9.3% (14), Aboriginal 25.7% (9), Black 22.9% (8), Middle Eastern 42.9% (15), Iranian 2.9% (1), Afghan 2.9% (1), Turkish 2.9% (1)
2Do not know and do not want to say
Feeding practices and vitamin D supplementation of infants aged two months
| Feeding practice | Feeding Practice | Vitamin D Supplement | |
|---|---|---|---|
| % ( | % yes ( | % ( | |
| Total | 100.0 (577) | 79.9 (461) | 28.9 (167) |
| All breast milk1 | 57.4 (331) | 91.2 (302)a* | 33.5 (111)a |
| Mixed breast milk and formula | 32.2 (186) | 79.0 (147)b | 22.0 (41)b |
| ≥75% breast milk2 | 53.8 (100) | 86.0 (86) | 21.0 (21) |
| 50- < 75% breast milk3 | 20.4 (38) | 84.2 (32) | 26.3 (10) |
| < 50% breast milk4 | 25.8 (48) | 60.4 (29) | 20.8 (10) |
| Infant formula | 10.4 (60) | 20.0 (12)c | 25.9 (15)ab |
1Only breast milk in the past week
2 ≤2 feedings of other liquids/food per day
33-4 feedings of other liquids/food per day
4 > 4 feedings of other liquids/food per day
5Total daily vitamin D intake from supplement and formula
*Rows showing different superscripts are significantly different from each other; χ2 P < 0.001
Figure 2Daily total vitamin D intake from supplements and infant formula at two months of age.
Advice and decisions on vitamin D supplementation
| % (n) | |
|---|---|
| Did anyone ever recommend a vitamin D supplement? | |
| Yes | 92.2 (532) |
| No | 7.8 (45) |
| Who recommended the supplement? ( | |
| Public health nurse | 80.2 (426) |
| Doctor | 69.7 (370) |
| Midwife | 9.6 (51) |
| Dietitian/pharmacist | 5.1 (27) |
| Family member or friend | 19.4 (103) |
| Other1 | 7.7 (46) |
| Reasons for providing a vitamin D supplement ( | |
| Not in breast milk/I am breastfeeding | 43.6 (197) |
| It was recommended | 30.3 (137) |
| Health benefits for infant | 28.3 (128) |
| Lack of sunlight/northern climate | 21.0 (95) |
| Other2 | 13.1 (59) |
| Reasons for not supplementing vitamin D ( | |
| Baby is being fed formula | 35.3 (41) |
| I didn't know to give | 10.3 (12) |
| I don't think the baby needs it | 19.0 (22) |
| Forgot to give | 3.4 (4) |
| Baby did not tolerate (vomit/spit up) | 0.9 (1) |
| Other3 | 5.2 (6) |
| No response | 28.4 (33) |
aMultiple responses possible
1Reading, television, internet, South Community Birth Program, Baby's Best Chance, prenatal class, lactation clinic, natural path, doula, specialist, from first child
2Knew from first baby, read about it, did not know why, it is important
3Confused with the recommended dose, will purchase later, will ask doctor, first baby did not tolerate, had not started yet
Percentages and multivariate adjusted odds ratio (and 95% CIs) for infant vitamin D supplementation in infants receiving greater than 50% of feeds from breast milk by select characteristics (n = 420)
| Characteristic | % ( | OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal Age | |||
| < 31 y | 87.6 (134) | 1.00 | |
| ≥31 y | 89.9 (286) | 1.28 (0.65, 2.50) | 0.479 |
| Baby's ethnicity | |||
| European | 88.9 (160) | 1.00 | |
| Chinese | 89.6 (129) | 1.34 (0.62, 2.86) | 0.456 |
| Other | 89.1 (131) | 1.32 (0.62, 2.80) | 0.469 |
| Annual family income | |||
| <$40,000 | 83.1 (74) | 1.00 | |
| $40,000-80,000 | 92.2 (95) | 2.51 (0.98, 6.41) | 0.054 |
| >$80,000 | 91.4 (170) | 2.24 (0.94, 5.30) | 0.068 |
| Non-responder1 | 87.1 (81) | 1.35 (0.58, 3.14) | 0.488 |
| Education | |||
| Less than completed trade/vocational | 87.0 (87) | 1.00 | |
| Completed trade/vocational training and college/university | 89.8 (333) | 0.99 (0.48, 2.04) | 0.984 |
| Parity | |||
| Primipara | 90.5 (219) | 1.00 | |
| Multipara | 87.8 (201) | 0.69 (0.37, 1.29) | 0.244 |
Note: CI confidence interval, OR multivariate adjusted odds ratio
1Do not know and do not want to say