| Literature DB >> 28596930 |
Amy Brown1, Sara Wyn Jones1, Hannah Rowan1.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Infants are traditionally introduced to solid foods using spoon-feeding of specially prepared infant foods. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Appetite control; Baby-led weaning; Breastfeeding; Choking; Complementary feeding; Eating behaviour; Energy regulation; Infant; Infant-led; Introduction solid foods; Maternal; Maternal feeding style; Nutrient intake; Responsive feeding; Weaning; Weight
Year: 2017 PMID: 28596930 PMCID: PMC5438437 DOI: 10.1007/s13668-017-0201-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Nutr Rep ISSN: 2161-3311
Overview of study methodologies included in review
| Authors | Type of data | Infant age range | Weaning type | Number of participants | Definition of baby-led weaning | Outcome measures | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brown and Lee [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire | 6–12 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 655 mothers | Proportion of pureed foods and spoon-feeding (BLW = 10% or less) | Comparison between BLW and traditional: demographic background of mother, timing of introduction to solid foods, type of first solids, weaning experience | |
| Brown and Lee [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire | 6–12 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 652 mothers | Proportion of pureed foods and spoon-feeding (BLW = 10% or less) | Maternal child-feeding style | |
| Brown and Lee [ | Maternal interview | 12–18 months | Baby-led only | 36 mothers | Self-defined | Experience of following a baby-led approach. Perceived benefits and negatives | |
| Rowan and Harris [ | Two 3-day diet diaries | 6–9 months | Baby-led only | 10 parents | Self-defined, parents required to read Rapley BLW book | Changes, if any, in parental diet after implementing BLW; description of foods offered to infants; similarity in parental and infant diets | |
| Cameron et al. [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire | 6–12 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 199 mothers | Adherent BLW: infant mostly/always self-fed; self-identified BLW <50% spoon-feeding; parent-led >50% spoon-feeding | Comparison between weaning groups: demographic information; parental attitudes and experiences of complementary feeding; types of foods offered | |
| Cameron et al. [ | Practitioner and maternal interviews | 8–24 months | Baby-led only | 31 Healthcare professionals; 20 mothers | Self-defined | Knowledge, attitudes and perceived benefits and concerns of healthcare professionals; experiences of mothers using BLW | |
| Townsend and Pitchford [ | Parental self-report questionnaire | 20–78 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 155 parents | Self-defined | Comparison between BLW and traditional: demographic background; infant feeding, weaning style; child’s food preferences and exposure; BMI | |
| Arden and Abbott [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire | 9–15 months | Baby-led only | 15 parents | Self-defined | Experience of following a baby-led approach; perceived benefits and practical issues; timing of introduction to solid foods | |
| Brown and Lee [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire | 18–24 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 298 mothers | Proportion of pureed foods and spoon-feeding (BLW = 10% or less) | Maternal demographic information; maternal feeding style; child eating behaviour; child and maternal BMI | |
| Brown [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire | 6–12 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 604 mothers | Proportion of pureed foods and spoon-feeding (BLW = 10% or less) | Comparison between BLW and traditional: demographic background; maternal BMI; weaning style; maternal eating behaviour and personality | |
| D’Andrea et al. 2016 [ | Healthcare providers and maternal self-report questionnaires | Not stated | Baby-led only | 33 Healthcare providers; 65 mothers | Self-defined | Knowledge, attitudes and perceived benefits and concerns of healthcare professionals; experiences and opinions of mothers using BLW | |
| BLISS study papers | |||||||
| Cameron, et al. [ | Parental interviews and 3-day diet diary or iron questionnaire | <6–9 months | Baby-led and BLISS only | 23 infants | Parents chose self-defined BLW or BLISS (modified BLW) group | Comparison between self-defined BLW and BLISS: maternal demographic information, high choking risk foods, high energy foods, iron containing foods | |
| Erickson [ | Infant feeding questionnaire and weighed diet record | 7 months | Baby-led (BLISS) versus traditional | 202 infants | Randomised to either BLISS (BLW) or control (traditional) | Adherence to BLISS protocol, food group intake, nutrient intake | |
| Morison et al. [ | Parental feeding questionnaire and weighed diet record | 6–8 months | Baby-led versus traditional | 51 infants | Self-defined | Comparison between BLW and traditional: food, nutrient and family meal intakes, feeding behaviours | |
| Fangupo et al. [ | Maternal report in five questionnaires | 0–12 months | Baby-led (BLISS) versus traditional | 206 infants | Randomised to either BLISS (BLW) or control (traditional) | Comparison between BLW and traditional: gagging and choking incidents, types of foods offered | |
| Papers not directly investigating BLW | |||||||
| Arden [ | Maternal online questionnaire | 6 months | All | 105 mothers | Self-defined | Factors associated with timing of weaning | |
| Wright et al. [ | Maternal self-report questionnaire and finger feeding diary | 4–>8 months | All | 510 infants | Not studied directly | Demographic and developmental information, timing of first reaching out for food, timing of first finger foods | |
| Moore et al. [ | Parental online questionnaire | N/A, babies had been weaned | All | 3607 parents | Self-defined | Factors associated with timing of weaning | |