scholarly journals What Can Meal Observations Tell Us about Eating Behavior in Malnourished Children?

Author(s):  
Antonina N. Mutoro ◽  
Ada L. Garcia ◽  
Charlotte M. Wright

Responsive feeding is an important aspect of child care, yet little is known about child eating and caregiver feeding behavior in Kenya. This study aimed to develop a mealtime observation methodology and assess child eating and caregiver feeding behavior in healthy and undernourished children in Nairobi. Healthy (n = 6) and undernourished (n = 13) children aged 6–24 months were observed during a meal, with standardized rating of child interest in food, mood, distraction and caregiver responsiveness. Eating and feeding behavior varied with the stage of the meal. Child interest in food decreased and child and caregiver distraction increased as the meal progressed. Healthy children were happy and interested in food during meals, but undernourished children often had low interest in food (7/13). The 7 undernourished children eating home food were distracted (3) and unhappy (5) but children eating ready-to-use therapeutic foods (6) were all happy and undistracted. Caregivers of healthy children offered encouragement more often during meals than caregivers of undernourished children (5/6 healthy, 3/13 undernourished). Meal observations were resource intensive and could give only a snapshot of the child feeding experience. More efficient research methods that can capture a general assessment of infant eating behavior are needed.

2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_2) ◽  
pp. 924-924
Author(s):  
Charlotte Wright ◽  
Ada Garcia ◽  
Antonina Mutoro ◽  
Amara Khan ◽  
Beatrice Milligan ◽  
...  

Abstract Objectives Undernutrition risk increases when children transition to complementary feeding in lower/middle income countries. Our newly developed ICFET assesses feeding and eating behavior (FEB); we aimed to test its performance in different countries and assess FEB in wasted and healthy infants. Methods Healthy and malnourished children aged 6–24 months were sampled from child health and malnutrition clinics in urban slums in Nairobi, Kenya (n = 157), peri-urban Lahore, Pakistan (n = 108), rural Retalhuleu, Guatemala (n = 125) and playgroups in Glasgow, United Kingdom (UK, n = 97). Children were measured and parents surveyed using the ICFET, which comprises standardized questions on meal frequency and self-feeding, and 5-point scores for enthusiasm for eating (Avidity), food refusal (Avoidance) and Force-feeding. Results Of 487 children, mean (SD) age 14.2 (5.3) months, 77 (16%) were wasted (body mass index < −2SD). Complementary feeding started earliest in the UK, with 91% starting before 6 m, and latest in Pakistan, where 27% started ≥ 8 m. In 336 healthy weight children, median (Q1, Q3) Avidity was higher (3.67; 2.8–4.2) than Avoidance (2.0; 1.6–2.6); Kenyan children had highest avoidance (2.4; 1.8–3.0) and Pakistani children lowest avidity (2.2; 2–2.8). Force feeding was rare in the UK (17%) and Guatemala (15%), but common in Pakistan (76%) and Kenya (82%). In LMIC children, wasted infants had lower median Avidity (2.7) than healthy (3.5; P < 0.001), but similar Avoidance and Force-feeding. Healthy children were offered 3 (2–3) plated meals and 1 (0–3) energy dense snacks daily. Compared to healthy, wasted children had fewer meals (2; vs 3; P = 0.006) and more milk (3 vs 2; P = 0.016). Conclusions Malnourished children were less hungry and ate fewer meals, but still refused food. The ICFET identified between country variation in complementary feeding behavior. It will be valuable for the identification of poor feeding and eating practices and informing intervention. Funding Sources Scottish Funding Council (Global Challenges Research Fund).


2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 841-845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eleanor R. Mackey ◽  
Meredith Rose ◽  
Carrie Tully ◽  
Maureen Monaghan ◽  
Samantha Hamburger ◽  
...  

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