| Literature DB >> 33237894 |
Katelyn V Chiang, Heather C Hamner, Ruowei Li, Cria G Perrine.
Abstract
The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommends introducing complementary foods (i.e., any solid or liquid other than breast milk or infant formula) to infants at approximately age 6 months (1). Although a consensus on ideal timing is lacking, most experts agree that introduction of complementary foods before age 4 months is too early because of infant gastrointestinal and motor immaturity (1,2). In addition, early introduction prevents exclusively breastfed infants from reaching the recommended 6 months of exclusive breastfeeding (1) and might be associated with increased risk for overweight and obesity (3). Nationally representative data on complementary feeding are limited; state-level estimates have been previously unavailable. CDC analyzed 2016-2018 data from the National Survey of Children's Health (NSCH) (N = 23,927) to describe timing of complementary feeding introduction and prevalence of early introduction of complementary foods before age 4 months (early introduction) among children aged 1-5 years. Prevalence of early introduction was 31.9% nationally and varied geographically and across sociodemographic and infant feeding characteristics. These estimates suggest that many infants are introduced to complementary foods before they are developmentally ready. Efforts by health care providers and others who might influence infant feeding practices could help decrease the number of infants who are introduced to complementary foods too early.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33237894 PMCID: PMC7727602 DOI: 10.15585/mmwr.mm6947a4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep ISSN: 0149-2195 Impact factor: 17.586
FIGURE 1Age at introduction of complementary foods among children aged 1–5 years* — National Survey of Children's Health, United States, 2016–2018
Abbreviation: CI = confidence interval.
* 95% confidence intervals are indicated by error bars.
Percentage of infants introduced to complementary foods before age 4 months, by sociodemographic characteristics, infant milk feeding status at age 4 months, and region among children aged 1–5 years — National Survey of Children's Health, United States, 2016–2018
| Characteristic | Total no.* | % Introduced early† | 95% CI† |
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| Hispanic | 2,626 | 29.9 | (26.3–33.7) |
| White, non-Hispanic | 16,853 | 31.5 | (30.2–32.9) |
| Black, non-Hispanic | 1,211 | 40.5 | (35.7–45.4) |
| Asian, non-Hispanic | 1,125 | 23.8 | (19.1–29.1) |
| Other/Multiracial, non-Hispanic | 2,112 | 33.2 | (29.5–37.1) |
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| 18–29 | 4,634 | 34.0 | (31.1–37.1) |
| 30–39 | 14,201 | 28.8 | (27.3–30.5) |
| ≥40 | 3,412 | 33.3 | (30.0–36.8) |
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| High school diploma or less | 2,544 | 34.3 | (30.6–38.1) |
| Some college | 5,962 | 33.4 | (30.8–36.1) |
| Bachelor's degree or more | 13,664 | 27.7 | (26.3–29.1) |
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| <100% FPL | 2,429 | 35.2 | (31.0–39.6) |
| 100%–199% FPL | 3,745 | 34.3 | (30.9–37.8) |
| 200%–399% FPL | 7,662 | 31.7 | (29.4–34.0) |
| ≥400% FPL | 10,091 | 28.5 | (26.7–30.4) |
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| Breast milk feeding only | 9,085 | 18.5 | (16.9–20.2) |
| Infant formula feeding only | 9,567 | 41.6 | (39.5–43.8) |
| Mixed breast milk and infant formula feeding | 4,863 | 32.1 | (29.1–35.2) |
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| Northeast | 4,093 | 33.8 | (30.8–36.8) |
| Midwest | 6,063 | 32.3 | (30.2–34.4) |
| South | 7,675 | 34.8 | (32.6–37.0) |
| West | 6,096 | 25.7 | (23.0–28.7) |
Abbreviations: CI = confidence interval, FPL = federal poverty level.
* Denominators might not sum to total because of missing maternal sociodemographic or infant milk feeding status data.
† Percentages are weighted to account for complex survey design.
§ The percentage of infants introduced to complementary foods before age 4 months among Hispanic children is significantly different from that of non-Hispanic Black children. The percentage introduced early among non-Hispanic White children is significantly different from that of non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic Asian children. The percentage introduced early among non-Hispanic Black children is significantly different from that of all other racial/ethnic groups. The percent introduced early among non-Hispanic Asian children is significantly different from that of non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, and non-Hispanic other/multiracial children. The percentage introduced early among non-Hispanic other/multiracial children is significantly different from that of non-Hispanic Black and non-Hispanic Asian children.
¶ Maternal sociodemographic data might be missing because no mother was reported in the child's household or because information was not reported by respondent.
** The percentage of infants introduced to complementary foods before age 4 months among children of mothers aged 30–39 years is significantly different from that of children of mothers aged 18–29 and ≥40 years.
†† The percentage of infants introduced to complementary foods before 4 months among children of mothers with bachelor's degrees or higher is significantly different from that of children of mothers of all other highest education levels.
§§ The percentage of infants introduced to complementary foods before 4 months among children living at ≥400% FPL is significantly different from that of children living at all other household income levels.
¶¶ The percentage of infants introduced to complementary foods before age 4 months among children receiving only breast milk for milk feeds at age 4 months is significantly different from that of children receiving all other types of nutrition for milk feeds at age 4 months. The percentage introduced early among children receiving only infant formula for milk feeds at age 4 months is significantly different from that of children receiving all other types of nutrition for milk feeds at age 4 months. The percentage introduced early among children receiving both breast milk and infant formula for milk feeds at age 4 months is significantly different from that of children receiving all other types of nutrition for milk feeds at age 4 months.
*** U.S. Census Bureau classifications for regions.
††† The percentage of children introduced to complementary foods before age 4 months among children living in the West is significantly different from that of children living in all other regions.
FIGURE 2Percentage of children introduced to complementary foods before age 4 months among children aged 1–5 years — National Survey of Children's Health, United States, 2016–2018
Abbreviation: DC = District of Columbia.