International Journal of Homeopathy & Natural Medicines

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Minimum Acceptable Diet and Factor Associated with It Among Infant and Young Children Age 6-23 Months in North Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia

Received: 24 January 2019    Accepted: 07 March 2019    Published: 21 March 2019
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Abstract

Appropriate complementary feeding Practice is essential in the first two years of life for satisfactory growth and development of children and for prevention of childhood illness. Insufficient quantities, frequency and inadequate quality of complementary foods have a detrimental effect on health and growth in this critical period. The aim of this study was to assess minimum dietary diversity and meal frequency practice and determinants among infant and young children age between 6 and 23 months in Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. Institution-based cross-sectional study was carried out to select 200 mothers/caregivers with 6–23 months of children reside in Sheno health center from July 25 to August 25, 2017. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to gather information on socio-demographic, child feeding practices and health-related characteristics. Data were entered to Epi-Data version 3.02 and transported to SPSS version 21 for further analysis. Binary logistic regression was used to see the association between the outcome variables and explanatory variables, and multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify independent predictors of minimum acceptable diet. The study revealed that the percentage of 6–23 months of children who meet the recommended level of minimum dietary diversity and meal frequency were 45 and 33%, respectively. Proportion of children who received composite indictor minimum acceptable diet was only 13.3%. Mothers/caregivers who had postnatal care visit, having good knowledge about child feeding practice, getting media exposure and mothers who had growth monitoring follow up were positively associated with minimum acceptable diet. Even though the study showed better progress as compared to the national prevalence of complementary feeding practices, child feeding practices in the study area were inadequate and not achieving national and WHO infant and young child feeding recommendations. Strengthening the available strategies and creating new intervention measures to improve maternal and child health services and giving behavioral change communication on child feeding practice using local media are compulsory actions for the government and policymakers.

DOI 10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11
Published in International Journal of Homeopathy & Natural Medicines (Volume 5, Issue 1, June 2019)
Page(s) 1-7
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Dietary Diversity, Meal Frequency, 6–23 Months of Children, Northern Ethiopia

References
[1] WHO. Guiding principles for complementary feeding of the breastfed child, Geneva, Switzerland. 2001.
[2] UNICEF. Infant and Young Child Feeding Programming Guide. 2011.
[3] Dewey KG, Brown KH. Update on technical issues concerning complementary feeding of young children in developing countries and implications for intervention programs. 2003; 24 [1]: 5–28.
[4] Robert E Black, Lindsay H Allen, Zulfiqar A Bhutta, Laura E Caulfield, Mercedes de Onis, Majid Ezzati, Colin Mathers JR. Maternal and child undernutrition: global and regional exposures and health consequences. 2004; 80: 131–41.
[5] Black RE, Allen LH, Bhutta ZA, Caulfield LE, Onis M De, Ezzati M, et al. Series Maternal and Child Undernutrition  : global and regional exposures and health consequences. 2008; 5–22.
[6] UNICEF. Innocnti declaration 2005 on infant and young child feeding. 2015.
[7] WHO. Indicators for assessing infant and young child feeding practices. 2010.
[8] USAID. Nutrition technical Developing and Validating Simple Indicators of Dietary Quality of Infants and Young Children in Developing Countries : Additional Analysis of 10 Data Sets September 2007 Working Group on Infant and Young Child Feeding Indicators , Wash. 2007.
[9] UNICEF. Child mortality estimates. 2017.
[10] Aemro M, Atnafu A, Meseie M, Birhanu Z. Dietary diversity and meal frequency practices among infant and young children age 6-23 months in Ethiopia : A secondary analysis of Ethiopian Demographic and Health. 2011.
[11] Central Statistical Agency. Ethiopia Demographic and Health Survey. 2011.
[12] Beyene M, Worku AG, Wassie MM. Dietary diversity , meal frequency and associated factors among infant and young children in Northwest Ethiopia  Available from: http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-015-2333-x.
[13] Central Statistical Agency. Ethiopia Demographic and Health Survey. 2016.
[14] Strategy N. Ethiopia National Nutrition Strategy Review and Analysis of Progress and Gaps : One Year On. 2009.
[15] Belew AK, Ali BM, Abebe Z, Dachew BA. Dietary diversity and meal frequency among infant and young children : a community based study. Italian Journal of Pediatrics; 2017; 6–15.
[16] Gautam KP, Adhikari M, Khatri RB, Devkota MD. Determinants of infant and young child feeding practices in Rupandehi , Nepal. BMC Res Notes. BioMed Central; 2016; 1–7.
[17] Shams N, Mostafavi F, Hassanzadeh A. Determinants of complementary feeding practices among mothers of 6 – 24 months failure to thrive children based on behavioral analysis phase of precede model , Tehran. 2016.
[18] Ickes SB, Hurst TE, Flax VL. Maternal Literacy , Facility Birth , and Education Are Positively Associated with Better Infant and Young Child Feeding Practices and Nutritional Status among Ugandan Children 1 – 3. 2015; [6].
[19] Kuah JY, Manikam L. Systematic Review of Infant and Young Children Complementary Systematic Review of Infant and Young Children Complementary Feeding Practices [CFP] in South Asian Families. 2016; [September 2017].
[20] Senarath U, Dibley MJ, Kabir I, Khanam M, Agho KE, Mihrshahi S, et al. Complementary feeding practices in South Asia: Analyses by the South Asia Infant Feeding Research Network [SAIFRN]. 2012; 8 [January].
Author Information
  • Department of Population and Family Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia

  • Department of Medicine and Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia

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    Getu Gizaw, Gudina Tesfaye. (2019). Minimum Acceptable Diet and Factor Associated with It Among Infant and Young Children Age 6-23 Months in North Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. International Journal of Homeopathy & Natural Medicines, 5(1), 1-7. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11

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    ACS Style

    Getu Gizaw; Gudina Tesfaye. Minimum Acceptable Diet and Factor Associated with It Among Infant and Young Children Age 6-23 Months in North Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. Int. J. Homeopathy Nat. Med. 2019, 5(1), 1-7. doi: 10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11

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    AMA Style

    Getu Gizaw, Gudina Tesfaye. Minimum Acceptable Diet and Factor Associated with It Among Infant and Young Children Age 6-23 Months in North Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. Int J Homeopathy Nat Med. 2019;5(1):1-7. doi: 10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11,
      author = {Getu Gizaw and Gudina Tesfaye},
      title = {Minimum Acceptable Diet and Factor Associated with It Among Infant and Young Children Age 6-23 Months in North Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia},
      journal = {International Journal of Homeopathy & Natural Medicines},
      volume = {5},
      number = {1},
      pages = {1-7},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ijhnm.20190501.11},
      eprint = {https://download.sciencepg.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ijhnm.20190501.11},
      abstract = {Appropriate complementary feeding Practice is essential in the first two years of life for satisfactory growth and development of children and for prevention of childhood illness. Insufficient quantities, frequency and inadequate quality of complementary foods have a detrimental effect on health and growth in this critical period. The aim of this study was to assess minimum dietary diversity and meal frequency practice and determinants among infant and young children age between 6 and 23 months in Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. Institution-based cross-sectional study was carried out to select 200 mothers/caregivers with 6–23 months of children reside in Sheno health center from July 25 to August 25, 2017. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to gather information on socio-demographic, child feeding practices and health-related characteristics. Data were entered to Epi-Data version 3.02 and transported to SPSS version 21 for further analysis. Binary logistic regression was used to see the association between the outcome variables and explanatory variables, and multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify independent predictors of minimum acceptable diet. The study revealed that the percentage of 6–23 months of children who meet the recommended level of minimum dietary diversity and meal frequency were 45 and 33%, respectively. Proportion of children who received composite indictor minimum acceptable diet was only 13.3%. Mothers/caregivers who had postnatal care visit, having good knowledge about child feeding practice, getting media exposure and mothers who had growth monitoring follow up were positively associated with minimum acceptable diet. Even though the study showed better progress as compared to the national prevalence of complementary feeding practices, child feeding practices in the study area were inadequate and not achieving national and WHO infant and young child feeding recommendations. Strengthening the available strategies and creating new intervention measures to improve maternal and child health services and giving behavioral change communication on child feeding practice using local media are compulsory actions for the government and policymakers.},
     year = {2019}
    }
    

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    AB  - Appropriate complementary feeding Practice is essential in the first two years of life for satisfactory growth and development of children and for prevention of childhood illness. Insufficient quantities, frequency and inadequate quality of complementary foods have a detrimental effect on health and growth in this critical period. The aim of this study was to assess minimum dietary diversity and meal frequency practice and determinants among infant and young children age between 6 and 23 months in Shoa, Oromia Region, Ethiopia. Institution-based cross-sectional study was carried out to select 200 mothers/caregivers with 6–23 months of children reside in Sheno health center from July 25 to August 25, 2017. An interviewer-administered questionnaire was used to gather information on socio-demographic, child feeding practices and health-related characteristics. Data were entered to Epi-Data version 3.02 and transported to SPSS version 21 for further analysis. Binary logistic regression was used to see the association between the outcome variables and explanatory variables, and multivariable logistic regression was performed to identify independent predictors of minimum acceptable diet. The study revealed that the percentage of 6–23 months of children who meet the recommended level of minimum dietary diversity and meal frequency were 45 and 33%, respectively. Proportion of children who received composite indictor minimum acceptable diet was only 13.3%. Mothers/caregivers who had postnatal care visit, having good knowledge about child feeding practice, getting media exposure and mothers who had growth monitoring follow up were positively associated with minimum acceptable diet. Even though the study showed better progress as compared to the national prevalence of complementary feeding practices, child feeding practices in the study area were inadequate and not achieving national and WHO infant and young child feeding recommendations. Strengthening the available strategies and creating new intervention measures to improve maternal and child health services and giving behavioral change communication on child feeding practice using local media are compulsory actions for the government and policymakers.
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