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Accepted for/Published in: JMIR Research Protocols

Date Submitted: Mar 24, 2021
Date Accepted: Mar 30, 2021

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Nutritional Implications of Baby-Led Weaning and Baby Food Pouches as Novel Methods of Infant Feeding: Protocol for an Observational Study

Taylor R, Conlon C, Beck K, von Hurst P, Te Morenga L, Daniels L, Haszard J, Meldrum A, McLean N, Cox A, Tukuafu L, Casale M, Brown K, Jones E, Katiforis I, Rowan M, McArthur J, Fleming E, Wheeler B, Houghton L, Diana A, Heath AL

Nutritional Implications of Baby-Led Weaning and Baby Food Pouches as Novel Methods of Infant Feeding: Protocol for an Observational Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2021;10(4):e29048

DOI: 10.2196/29048

PMID: 33881411

PMCID: 8100878

Nutritional Implications of Baby-Led Weaning and Baby Food Pouches as Novel Methods of Infant Feeding: Protocol for an Observational Study

  • Rachael Taylor; 
  • Cathryn Conlon; 
  • Kathryn Beck; 
  • Pamela von Hurst; 
  • Lisa Te Morenga; 
  • Lisa Daniels; 
  • Jill Haszard; 
  • Alison Meldrum; 
  • Neve McLean; 
  • Alice Cox; 
  • Lesieli Tukuafu; 
  • Maria Casale; 
  • Kimberly Brown; 
  • Emily Jones; 
  • Ioanna Katiforis; 
  • Madeleine Rowan; 
  • Jenny McArthur; 
  • Elizabeth Fleming; 
  • Ben Wheeler; 
  • Lisa Houghton; 
  • Aly Diana; 
  • Anne-Louise Heath

ABSTRACT

Background:

The complementary feeding period is a time of unparalleled dietary change for every human, during which the diet changes from one that is 100% milk to a diet that resembles that of the wider family, in less than a year. Despite this major dietary shift, we know relatively little about food and nutrient intake in infants worldwide, and virtually nothing about the impact of baby food ‘pouches’ and ‘Baby-Led Weaning’ (BLW); infant feeding approaches that are becoming increasingly popular. Pouches are squeezable containers with a plastic spout that have great appeal for parents, as evidenced by their extraordinary market share worldwide. Baby-Led Weaning is an alternative approach to introducing solids that promotes the infant self-feeding whole foods rather than being fed purées, and is popular and widely advocated on social media. The nutritional and health impacts of these novel methods of infant feeding have not yet been determined.

Objective:

The aim of the First Foods New Zealand study is to determine the iron status, growth, food and nutrient intakes, breast milk intake, eating and feeding behaviours, dental health, oral motor skills, and choking risk, of New Zealand infants in general, and of those using pouches or BLW compared to those who are not.

Methods:

Dietary intake (two 24-hour recalls supplemented with food photographs), iron status (haemoglobin, plasma ferritin, soluble transferrin receptor), weight status (body mass index), food pouch use and extent of BLW (questionnaire), breast milk intake (deuterium oxide ‘dose-to-mother’ technique), eating and feeding behaviours (questionnaires and video recording of an evening meal), dental health (photographs of upper and lower teeth for counting of caries and developmental defects of enamel), oral motor skills (questionnaires), and choking risk (questionnaire) will be assessed in 625 infants aged 7.0-9.9 months. Propensity score matching will be used to address bias caused by differences in demographics between groups so that the results more closely represent a potential causal effect.

Results:

This observational study has full ethical approval from the Health and Disability Ethics Committees New Zealand (19/STH/151) and was funded in May 2019 by the Health Research Council (HRC) of New Zealand (grant 19/172). Data collection commenced in July 2020 and first results are expected to be submitted for publication in 2022.

Conclusions:

This large study will provide much needed data on the implications for nutritional intake and health of the use of baby food pouches, and BLW, in infancy. Clinical Trial: Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (www.anzctr.org.au, registration number: ACTRN12620000459921).


 Citation

Please cite as:

Taylor R, Conlon C, Beck K, von Hurst P, Te Morenga L, Daniels L, Haszard J, Meldrum A, McLean N, Cox A, Tukuafu L, Casale M, Brown K, Jones E, Katiforis I, Rowan M, McArthur J, Fleming E, Wheeler B, Houghton L, Diana A, Heath AL

Nutritional Implications of Baby-Led Weaning and Baby Food Pouches as Novel Methods of Infant Feeding: Protocol for an Observational Study

JMIR Res Protoc 2021;10(4):e29048

DOI: 10.2196/29048

PMID: 33881411

PMCID: 8100878

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