| Literature DB >> 23630143 |
Qiong Wu1, Michelle H M M T van Velthoven, Li Chen, Josip Car, Diana Rudan, Vanja Saftić, Yanfeng Zhang, Ye Li, Robert W Scherpbier.
Abstract
AIM: To develop affordable, appropriate, and nutritious recipes based on local food resources and dietary practices that have the potential to improve infant feeding practices.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23630143 PMCID: PMC3662389 DOI: 10.3325/cmj.2013.54.157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Croat Med J ISSN: 0353-9504 Impact factor: 1.351
Figure 1Flowchart for development of nutritional recipes.
Foods consumed by 10% or more of infants during the 24-h recall period
| Food items | No. (%) of children (N = 110) | Number of times mentioned |
|---|---|---|
| Egg | 55 (50.0) | 73 |
| Rice | 38 (34.5) | 53 |
| Noodles | 31 (28.2) | 39 |
| Maize flour | 23 (20.9) | 24 |
| Steam bread | 22 (20.0) | 25 |
| Cookies | 21 (19.1) | 25 |
| Lactic acid drink | 20 (18.2) | 28 |
| Cowpea angle (green beans) | 20 (18.2) | 21 |
| Millet (type of grain) | 18 (16.4) | 24 |
| Sausage | 15 (13.6) | 18 |
| Infant formula | 14 (12.7) | 24 |
| Cakes | 14 (12.7) | 14 |
| Eggplant | 12 (10.9) | 12 |
The key food list and reasons for choosing foods
| Frequently mentioned foods | Reasons for choosing foods | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mentioned in dietary recall survey | Available (in local markets) | Source of nutrients | |
| Egg | Frequently | Yes | Proteins |
| Rice | Frequently | Yes | Carbohydrates |
| Noodles | Frequently | Yes | Carbohydrates |
| Maize flour | Frequently | Yes | Carbohydrates |
| Steam bread | Frequently | Yes | Carbohydrates |
| Cowpea angle(green bean) | Frequently | Summer and autumn | Vitamin A |
| Eggplant | Frequently | Yes | Vitamin B |
| Nutrient-rich foods not frequently mentioned by mothers | |||
| Lean pork | Rarely | Yes | Iron |
| Chicken | Rarely | Yes | Iron |
| Pork liver | No | Yes | Iron and vitamin A |
| Tomato | Rarely | Yes | Vitamin A and C |
| Pork blood | No | Yes | Iron |
| Sweet potato | No | Yes, and also produced at home | Carbohydrates, proteins and calcium |
| Potato | Rarely | Yes | Carbohydrates |
| Tofu | Rarely | Yes | Proteins |
| Carrot | No | Yes | Vitamin A |
| Pumpkin | Rarely | Yes, and also produced at home | Carbohydrates, vitamin A |
| Rape | Rarely | Spring, summer, and autumn | Vitamin A and dietary fiber |
| Chinese cabbage | Rarely | Autumn and winter | Vitamin C and dietary fiber |
| Spinach | Rarely | Spring, summer and autumn | Vitamin A and dietary fiber |
| Pure milk | Rarely | Yes | Proteins and calcium |
| Yoghurt | Rarely | Yes | Proteins and calcium |
| Apple | Rarely | Yes | Vitamin C and dietary fiber |
| Banana | Rarely | Yes | Vitamin C and dietary fiber |
| Beans | Rarely | Yes | Proteins |
| Sesame paste | No | Yes | Calcium |
| Fat-rich food not mentioned above | |||
| Oil | Frequently | Yes | Fat |
Mothers’ perceptions of meat and feeding practices
| Meat (No. of mothers asked) | No. of mothers who did not give the food to their child and reasons why | No. of mothers who gave the food to their child and reasons why | Reason why mothers did not give their child the food at six months | Conditions necessary to give the food to a child younger than two years of age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. The child’s stomach was not good for lean meat (1/2) | 1. When the child has teeth and can chew meat (7/8)
2. Do not know (1/8) | |||
| 1. Do not know (2/3) 2. The child was too young to digest liver before 9 mo and I feared choking (1/3) | 1. When the child has teeth and can chew and digest it (5/7) 2. Do not know (2/7) 3. The child is able to eat (1/7) |
Mothers’ perceptions of vegetables and feeding practices
| Vegetables (No. of mothers asked) | No. of mothers who did not give the food to their child and reasons why | No. of mothers who gave the food to their child and reasons why | Reason why mothers did not give their child the food at six months | Conditions necessary to feed the food to a child younger than two years of age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Breast milk is enough till the child is nine months of age (1/8)
2. Pumpkin was available at home at that time (8 mo, 11 mo) (2/8)
3. The child did not like to eat it before one year (1/8)
4. Family members did not like to eat the food for children younger than one year (1/8)
5. Do not know (1/8) | 1. Do not know (2/2) | |||
| 1. The child cannot chew rape before one year (1/3)
2. Breast milk is enough before the eight months of age (1/3)
3. The child did not like to eat it when he or she was six months old (1/3) | 1. When the child has teeth and can chew rape (4/7)
2 Cooked for a longer time (2/7)
3. When rape is available at home (3/7)
3. Family members like to eat it (2/7) | |||
| 1. Too young to chew spinach before the age of one year (1/4)
2. Cannot eat spinach before the age of one year (1/4)
3. Breast milk is enough before the age of one year (1/4)
4. Breast milk is enough before the age of eight months (1/4) | 1. When the child has teeth and can chew and digest spinach (6/6) | |||
| 1. No teeth and cannot chew and digest it (4/10)
2. Breast milk is enough before the age of 10 mo (1/10)
3. Should be given complementary foods at the age of seven or eight months (1/10) | ||||
| 1. Child cannot eat foods before the age of nine months (1/4) 2. It was not the season for sweet potato when the child was six months old (3/4) | 1. The sweet potatoes are seasonally available (5/6) 2. Do not know (1/6) |
Mothers’ perceptions of other foods and feeding practices
| Other foods (No. of mothers asked) | No. of mothers who did not give the foods to their child and reasons why | No. of mothers who gave the foods to their child and reasons why | Reason why mothers did not give their child the food at six months | Conditions necessary to feed the food to a child younger than two years of age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Breast milk is enough for the child before eight months of age (2/10)
2. Breast milk is enough for the child before one year (1/10)
3. Child cannot eat at 6 mo of age (2/10)
4. Do not know (2/10) | ||||
| 1. The child does not like to eat beans (1/11) | 2. When the child has teeth and can chew and digest beans (5/9)
3. When beans are available (3/9)
4. When beans are cheap (1/9) | |||
| 1. Breastmilk is enough for the child before the age of one, and yoghurt is not nutritious (1/10) | 2. When it is available at home (1/9) 3. Do not know (6/9) 4. Children like to eat it (2/9) 5. Breast milk is not enough (1/9) 6. When the child can digest foods well (1/9) |
Acceptability, compliance, and feasibility of the ten recipes tested
| N | Recipes | Acceptability | Compliance | Feasibility | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of mothers who intended to continue using it | Children’s responses | Number of mothers who put the recipe into practice | Average number of times that mothers used the recipe per week (2 weeks in total) | Compatibility with beliefs and knowledge | Cost in economic resources | Cost in time and effort | ||
| 1 | Porridge with pumpkin and rape† | 6/6* | Liked eating it (6/6), could not eat when ill (1/6) | 6/6 | 4 | 1. Nutritious (4/6)
2. Homestyle cooking, eating almost every day (3/6) | Inexpensive (5/6) | 1. Easy to cook, takes little time and effort (6/6)
2. All the ingredients are available at home (3/6) |
| 2 | Rice porridge with tofu and rape† | 7/7* | Liked (4/6), disliked (2/6) | 6/6 | 3 | 1. Nutritious (6/7)
2. Homestyle cooking and no need to make special meals for children (1/7) | Inexpensive (7/7)
Easy to buy (7/7) | 1. Easy to cook, takes little time and effort (7/7) |
| 3 | Rice porridge with mashed pork liver and carrots | 4/6 | Liked (2/6), disliked due to the smell of pork liver (2/6) | 4/6 | 1 | 1. Nutritious and good for children (4/6)
2. Children were too young to digest pork liver (3/6) | Raw pork liver is not easy to get from markets, but cooked liver can easily be bought (4/6) | 1. Easy to cook (3/6)
2. Need a blender to make mashed liver (4/6) |
| 4 | Noodles with egg, tomato and rape† | 6/6 | Liked (5/6), disliked (1/6) | 6/6 | 4 | 1. Nutritious (4/6)
2. When children liked it, mothers were willing to cook it | Inexpensive (6/6) | Simple and easy to cook, with little effort (6/6) |
| 5 | Noodles with pork liver, eggplant and potato | 3/6 | Liked (3/6), disliked (3/6) | 6/6 | 2 | 1.Nutritious (6/6)
2. When children disliked it, mothers were not willing to cook it (3/6) | Pork liver is a bit expensive, but is acceptable (3/6) | 1. Inconvenient to cook (3/6)
2. Need to prepare lots of ingredients (3/6) |
| 6 | Noodles with pork blood and carrots† | 7/7 | Child liked eating(6/7), disliked noodles (1/7) | 6/7 | 2 | 1. Nutritious (7/7)
2. Child can eat pork blood easily (1/7)
3. Eating animal blood can prevent anemia (1/7) | 1. Inexpensive (3/7)
2. Ingredients are easily bought from local markets (6/7) | 1. Easy to cook. Take little time and effort (5/7)
2. Need to do special meal for child, inconvenient. (2/7) |
| 7 | Noodles with rape and agarics (fungus) | 6/6 | Liked (3/6), disliked (3/6) | 6/6 | 2 | 1.Nutritious (6/6)
2. Eating rape or other vegetables can provide vitamins; eating agarics can provide iron(1/6) | 1. Inexpensive (5/6) | Simple and easy to cook, with little effort (5/6)‡ |
| 8 | Rice with chicken, eggplant, and potato | 4/6 | Liked (4/6), disliked eggplant and potato. (1/6), disliked rice (1/6) | 6/6 | 2 | 1.Nutritious (5/6)
2.Home style cooking(1/6)
3. It is unnecessary to cook, because children disliked it (1/6)
3. Rice is dry, hard, and not easy to digest (3/6) | 1. Inexpensive (5/6)
2. Ingredients are easily bought from local markets (1/6) | Simple (5/6)‡ |
| 9 | Rice with lean pork and potato† | 4/6 | Liked (4/6), disliked rice (2/6) | 6/6 | 1 | 1. Lots of ingredients and nutritious (6/6)
2. Children will be bored if they always eat the same food (1/6) | Pork is a bit expensive (2/6) | Need more efforts to prepare lots ingredients (4/6) |
| 10 | Rice enriched with tomato and pork liver† | 4/6 | Liked (4/6), disliked rice (2/6) | 6/6 | 2 | 1. Nutritious (6/6) 2. Color is good (1/6) | 1. Inexpensive (3/6) 2. Raw pork liver is not easy to get from markets (2/6) | Simple and easy to cook, with little efforts (5/6) |
*Some of recipes were tested by six mothers, and some were tested by seven mothers.
†Six recipes we finally selected.
‡One of the mothers did not mention on the “Cost in time and effort” topic.
Nutritional value of example one-day recipe combination for children aged 12-23 mo*
| Nutrient | Nutritional value | Recommended daily intake (China) | Percentage of daily needs |
|---|---|---|---|
| Energy (kcal) | 932.6 | 1050 | 88.8 |
| Protein (g) | 36.2 | 35 | 103.4 |
| Fat (g) | 26.3 | 33.3-44.4 | 79.0 |
| Vitamin A (μg) | 2658.2† | 500 | 531.6 |
| Vitamin B1 (mg) | 0.4 | 0.6 | 66.7 |
| Vitamin B2 (mg) | 1.34 | 0.6 | 223.3 |
| Calcium (mg) | 56.3 | 400 | 114.1 |
| Iron (mg) | 11.4 | 12 | 95.0 |
| Zinc (mg) | 5.5 | 9 | 61.1 |
*Compared with the recommended daily intake (China), the nutritional value of the recipe combination cannot reach 100% of recommendation. However, mothers were recommended to add fruits, yoghurt, or healthy snacks between two meals to compensate for the gap.
†We used pork liver as an ingredient, which contains high vitamin A content (4972 μg/100g).