Update on Technical issues concerning Complementary Feeding of Young Children in Developing Countries and Implications for Intervention Programs
University of California, Davis
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Abstract
This paper provides an update to the 1998 WHO/UNICEF report on complementary feeding. New research findings are generally consistent with the guidelines in that report, but the adoption of new energy and micronutrient requirements for infants and young children will result in lower recommendations regarding minimum meal frequency and energy density of complementary foods, and will alter the list of "problem nutrients." Without fortification, the densities of iron, zinc, and vitamin B6 in complementary foods are often inadequate, and the intake of other nutrients may also be low in some populations. Strategies for obtaining the needed amounts of problem nutrients, as well as optimizing breastmilk intake when…
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Micronutrient
- Psychological intervention
- Environmental health
- Intervention (counseling)
- Nutrient
- Nutrient density
- Medicine
- Developing country
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