| Literature DB >> 27103229 |
Abstract
Considerable advances have been made in the field of infant feeding research. The last few decades have witnessed the expansion in the number of studies on the composition and benefits of human milk. The practice of breastfeeding and use of human milk represent today's reference standards for infant feeding and nutrition. Additional research regarding the benefits of breastfeeding is needed to determine which factors in human milk and in the act of breastfeeding itself, singly or in combination, are most important for producing the beneficial effects on infant growth, body composition, and neurodevelopmental outcome. We examine evidence that breastfeeding confers health benefits and offer suggestions on how best to interpret the data and present it to the public. We also describe some examples of well-designed infant nutrition studies that provide useful and clinically meaningful data regarding infant feeding, growth, and development. Because not all mothers choose to breastfeed or can breastfeed, other appropriate feeding options should be subjected to critical review to help establish how infant formula and bottle feeding can confer benefits similar to those of human milk and the act of breastfeeding. We conclude with the overarching point that the goal of infant feeding research is to promote optimal infant growth and development. Since parents/families may take different paths to feeding their infants, it is fundamental that health professionals understand how best to interpret research studies and their findings to support optimal infant growth and development.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Health benefits; Infant formula; Public health policy
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27103229 PMCID: PMC4840881 DOI: 10.1186/s12937-016-0162-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Advantages and Limitations of Various Types of Nutrition Studies
| Type of Study/Description | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Cell culture – in vitro | Help determine mechanisms of action. | What occurs in cells may be different from what occurs in human body. |
| Animal – in vivo | Can be tightly controlled for testing the metabolism, specificity, and reproducibility of the effect of a certain food component. | Humans differ from animals in many aspects of their physiology, such as food digestion, nutrient absorption, genetics, lifestyle, etc. |
| Case studies | Help determine how certain food/components may affect clinical conditions or disorders in humans. | Not scientifically rigorous – only one person’s experience. |
| Epidemiological/observational | Address whether a certain food/component could cause a disease but not whether it did cause a disease. | Memory recall is often used to assess how a food/component might have affected an individual – long-term memory recall may not be accurate. |
| Prospective cohort studies | Provide clues about the risk/benefits of a given diet, food component or lack of an important vitamin/mineral (e.g., development of iron deficiency and neurodevelopmental impairment) over time. | The controls may not be similar to those who acquire a disease with respect to demographic and health factors. |
| Randomized, controlled clinical trial (RCT) | Represents the “gold standard” for clinical trial methodology. | Unethical to randomize breastfed infants into an infant formula feeding group. |
| Meta-analysis | Meta-analysis of trials provides a more precise estimate of the treatment effect because of the increased sample size and statistical power. | The validity of the meta-analysis depends on the quality of the systematic review and studies included in the analysis. |