| Literature DB >> 29151370 |
Logan Manikam1, Anika Sharmila2, Abina Dharmaratnam3, Emma C Alexander2, Jia Ying Kuah2, Ankita Prasad2, Sonia Ahmed1, Raghu Lingam4, Monica Lakhanpaul1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Suboptimal 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 <2 years in Pakistan.Entities:
Keywords: Child; Complementary feeding; Diet; Infant; Nutrition; Pakistan
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29151370 PMCID: PMC5851056 DOI: 10.1017/S1368980017002956
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Public Health Nutr ISSN: 1368-9800 Impact factor: 4.022
Fig. 1Study selection process for the current systematic review (CFP, complementary feeding practices; BF, breast-feeding)
Summary of studies included in the current systematic review
| Study | Study type | Location | Population | Sample size | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahmed | Cross-sectional | Oghi, Pakistan | Mothers of children attending the Tehsil Headquarter Hospital of Oghi | Ten mothers from test epicentre | Diversity: Milk delivered can include cow’s milk, formula, mixed milk. CF foods include banana, cereals, apple, home-made semi-solid foods Introduction to CF: 10 % with cereal, 30 % fruits, 10 % cow’s milk. For current feeds: 20 % with cereal, 30 % apples, 30 % bananas, 10 % cow’s milk Advice: Knowledge is transferred from one generation of women to the other in the household, advice also comes from women’s magazines, radio and television Factors: Lack of knowledge, especially where there are fewer babies, is a barrier |
| Dev | Cross-sectional | Karachi, Pakistan | Bilal Colony and Bhains Colony | 355 mothers of children aged <2 years across two sites | Diversity: Bilal mothers used home food preparations more often than Bhains mothers. 93·0 % of home-made foods given in by sampled mothers in Bhains in Karachi contained |
| Dykes | Cohort | Nahaqi in Khyber Pakhtoonkhwa (KP), Pakistan | Women health workers in communities served by the Emergency Satellite Hospital in Nahaqi, KP | Sixteen local women health workers | Diversity: Weaning foods include |
| Hanif (2011)(
| Cross-sectional | Pakistan | Evaluation survey using data from across Pakistan | 168 332 households in Pakistan from 1990 to 2008 | Timing: Introduction of CF foods was rated as ‘poor’ relative to WHO indicators; this was also the case for bottle-feeding and early initiation of breast-feeding. 32·1 and 36·3 % were having CF at 6–9 months in 1990–91 |
| Hazir | Cross-sectional | Urban and rural Pakistan | Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey 2006–07 participants | 941 infants | Timing: Over 50 % of infants were not receiving soft, semi-solid or solid foods at the recommended time; 10 % of 3–5-month-olds commenced CF earlier than the recommended 6 months. Early CF was related to 4+ antenatal visits and there were geographical variations. Urban respondents were more likely to engage in early and timely CF, with 13·8 % giving CF at 3–5 months and at 56·6 % at 6–8 months. Only 9·1 % of rural respondents gave CF at 3–5 months, and only 33·2 % at 6–8 months Factors: Literate mothers, those with high levels of education, with many antenatal visits, from urban households and from wealthy households were more likely to practise appropriate CF. Mothers in employment, with fewer antenatal visits, from rural households, and in the Baluchistan and Sindh regions were less likely to practise appropriate CF. Risk of not introducing CF at the recommended age was higher with increased parity. Generally, as wealth index increased, so too did appropriate CF timing |
| Krebs | Cross-sectional | Urban Karachi, Pakistan (together with Zambia, Guatemala and Democratic Republic of Congo) | Clinic visitors in Karachi | 531 infants aged 5–9 months and 516 toddlers aged 12–24 months | Diversity: Meat is consumed often by under 25 % of infants; over 50 % receive fish, eggs or dairy regularly; 23·3 % are fed formula regularly. Legumes (beans and lentils), groundnuts (peanuts), meat, fish, eggs, dairy used Frequency: 50 % given 1–2 types of CF/d and 37·7 % receive CF 3+ times/d Factors: The cost of meat is a barrier, although modest amounts seem to be available in most households |
| Liaqat | Cross-sectional | Islamabad, Pakistan | Patients attending Outpatient Paediatrics Department of Federal Government Services Hospital, Islamabad | 500 mothers of infants aged 6–24 months | Timing: CF starts as late as 12 months among 64 % of uneducated respondents, |
| Lingam | Qualitative | Rawalpindi district in Pakistan (and rural Udaipur district of Rajasthan in India) | Patients in Rawalpindi district | Sixty-nine contacts | Diversity: Diet is commonly based on grains and legumes. Cerelac, a store-bought porridge, was common among affluent families and used with boiled potato and banana. |
| Mehkari | Cross-sectional | Tertiary care hospital of Karachi, Pakistan | Female health-care professionals working at the hospital | Ninety-four mothers | Diversity: 85 % of mothers preferred home-made CF foods, 15 % used commercial preparations. Common CF food items included |
| Memon | Cross-sectional | Liaquat University Hospital Jamshoro, Hyderabad, Pakistan | Mothers of infants aged 0–24 months | 500 mothers | Diversity: Of CF children aged 6–11 months (with 24 h recall), 40 (33 %) were given specially prepared meals Frequency: 100 (50 %) children aged 12–23 months received CF at appropriate frequency of 3–4 times/d Timing: 21 % of 2–3-month-olds received CF. 50 % of 12–23-month-olds received 3–4 CF feeds/d, categorized <3, 3–6 months Advice: For 78 % CF advice was given by family, for 22 % by doctors and health workers Factors: CF practices correlated with maternal education. Poorer households were more likely to have inadequate feeding practices than well-to-do families. Some mothers received incorrect advice from health workers. Mother getting pregnant resulted in failure to breast-feed for full 6 months. Being poor rather than middle class had an impact. Some initiated formula as breast milk was insufficient |
| Mohsin | Cross-sectional | Outpatient Department of Pediatrics, Civil Hospital, Karachi, Pakistan | Mothers attending Outpatient Department of Pediatrics, Civil Hospital, Karachi | 138 mothers of children aged up to 2 years | Diversity: Quality and quantity of CF often inadequate. 46·4 % used commercial food, tea used for CF Frequency: CF frequency often inadequate; 55·8 % fed solid foods 3 times/d, 39·9 % twice/d, 2·2 % once/d Timing: 84 % had knowledge that optimal time for CF was <6 months, only 13 % knew about correct timing. CF was often started early. 27·5 % considered <4 months to be optimal, and 57·2 % 4–6 months Advice: Doctors were main source of information about commercial CF foods for 52·9 %, |
| Premji | Qualitative | Ibrahim Haidery, Bin Qasim town of Karachi, Pakistan | Families with infants less than 6 weeks old | Ten mothers, eight fathers and four grandmothers | Timing: CF observed at <3 months, such as of |
| Sarwar (2002)(
| Cross-sectional across two countries | Mian Channu, Pakistan and England, UK | Pakistani mothers in England and Pakistan with children aged 3–12 months | Ninety mothers (forty-five living in England and forty-five in Pakistan) | Diversity: Family foods were used for CF in Pakistan, |
| Senarath | Cross-sectional | Pakistan | Mothers aged 12–49 years of from most recent Demographic and Health Survey data of Pakistan (2006–07) | 443 infants aged 6–8 months | Timing: Introduction of solid, semi-solid, or soft foods occurred for 39 % of Pakistan infants aged 6–8 months – low relative to other countries Factors: Delayed CF was significantly more likely in poorer households relative to the richest; birth order 5+ also a barrier |
| Shamim (2005)(
| Cross-sectional | Peri-urban Karachi, Pakistan | Factory workers from multiple ethnic groups visiting ‘Well Baby Clinic’ in Jinnah Medical College Hospital | 150 infants | Diversity: Tea is used extensively in >50 % of children. |
| Shamim | Cross sectional | Rural areas of Malir district in Karachi, Pakistan | Families living in Malir district | 359 children under 3 years old | Diversity: Two types of CF items observed – home-made food (home-made cereals, egg, banana, fish) and commercial food (read-to-use cereals, biscuits and rusk). Even those who ate the former group had high prevalence of malnourishment, stunting and wasting. |
| Sultana | Cross-sectional | Karachi, Pakistan | Vaccination centre in the Outpatient Department of Paediatrics, Civil Hospital | 200 children aged 4–6 months | Timing: Direct relationship between education status of mother and children being breast-fed for 4 months Factors: Illiterate mothers or less educated mothers had inappropriately timed CF |
CF, complementary feeding/complementary food; NGO, non-governmental organization.
Fig. 2(colour online) Location map of fourteen of the studies included the current systematic review (map courtesy of Google Maps; data © 2017 Google)
Weight of evidence awarded to each study in the current systematic review
| Weight of Evidence A | Weight of Evidence B | Weight of Evidence C | Weight of Evidence D | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Quality of methodology (accuracy, coherency and transparency of the evidence) | Relevance of methodology (appropriateness of the methodology for answering the review question) | Relevance of evidence to the review question (relevance of the focus of the evidence for answering the review question) | Overall weight of evidence (overall assessment of the extent to which the study provides evidence to answer the review question) |
| Ahmed | L | M | M | M |
| Dev | H | H | H | H |
| Dykes | L | M | M | M |
| Hanif(
| M | M | M | M |
| Hazir | H | M | H | H |
| Krebs | M | M | M | M |
| Liaqat | M | M | M | M |
| Lingam | M | H | H | H |
| Mehkari | H | M | H | H |
| Memon | M | H | H | H |
| Mohsin | M | H | H | H |
| Premji | M | M | L | M |
| Sarwar(
| H | H | H | H |
| Senarath | H | H | M | H |
| Shamim(
| M | M | H | M |
| Shamim | H | M | M | M |
| Sultana | L | M | L | L |
L, low; M, medium; H, high.
Foods utilized for complementary feeding in Pakistan, categorized into WHO food groups
| WHO classified food group | Number of studies and references |
|---|---|
| Grains, roots and tubers | Nine studies(
|
| Legumes and nuts | Six studies(
|
| Dairy products (e.g. milk, cheese, yoghurt) | Five studies(
|
| Flesh foods (e.g. meat, fish, poultry, and liver/organ meats) | Four studies(
|
| Eggs | Four studies(
|
| Vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables | Zero studies |
| Other fruits and vegetables | Eight studies(
|
If type of fruit/vegetable was not provided, it was classified as ‘other fruits and vegetables’.
Timing of introduction of complementary feeding in Pakistan
| Infant age | Number of studies and references |
|---|---|
| <3 months | Three studies(
|
| 3–6 months | Eleven studies(
|
| 6–9 months | Nine studies(
|
| 9–12 months | Three studies(
|
| 12–15 months | One study(
|
| 15–18 months | One study(
|
| >18 months | Zero studies |
Factors influencing complementary feeding (CF) practices in Pakistan
| Family level | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Promoters | Number of studies and references | Barriers | Number of studies and references |
| More educated mothers | Four studies(
| Lack of maternal knowledge of CF | Five studies(
|
| Literate mothers | One study(
| Cultural beliefs | Four studies(
|
| Mother who had 4+ antenatal visits | One study(
| Higher parity of mother | Three studies(
|
| Having a high level of parenting support | One study(
| Insufficient breast milk | Three studies(
|
| Lack of maternal time | Two studies(
| ||
| Mother in employment | Two studies(
| ||
| Mother becomes pregnant during CF period | Two studies(
| ||
| Mothers who had <4 antenatal visits | One study(
| ||
| Difficulty getting the baby to feed | One study(
| ||
| Delivery by caesarean section | One study(
| ||
| Organizational level | |||
| Promoters | Number of studies and references | Barriers | Number of studies and references |
| Wealthy households | Three studies(
| Household poverty | Six studies(
|
| NGO activity | One study(
| Food affordability and access | Four studies(
|
| Improved health education | One study(
| Poor advice from health workers | One study(
|
| Urban households | One study(
| Rural households | One study(
|
NGO, non-governmental organization.