Pathways to Health Flashcards
How are obesity trends expected to change?
Expected to increase in children in all areas of the world
How does obesity in infants and children differ with ethnicity in USA?
most prevalent in hispanic and black versus white
* Not every children has the same risk
Infant care project
Looked at estrogen and progesterone in baby poop and relation to growth patterns and how early life origins may impact health and disease
* high risk trajectory vs. low risk trajectory
What impacts our health
Using the SEM model
* individual biology and health
* houshold and family context
* community
* organizational/ environmentalop
Infant feeding reccomendations
WHO recommendations: Exclusive breastfeeding to 6 months and nutritionally adequate and safe complementary foods, while continuing to breastfeed for up to two years or beyond.
What are considered adaquate complementary foods for infant feeding?
Any nutrient containing foods or liquids other than breastmilk given to young children during the periods of complementary feeding when other foods or liquids are provided along with breastmilk.
* Fe rich foods
What is the benefit of breastfeeding?
May lower risk of development of obesity with exclusive breastfeeding for longer then the 6 months
What is the impact of the early feeding environment on the development of obesity?
- Transitional period when children learn what and how to eat
- Period of rapid growth
- Metabolic physiology developing
- Food-related preferences and eating behaviors develop (what they are initially introduced to is important culturally and nutritionally)
- Parental behaviors and household and social environments shape food learning
How do households and family context shape infant feeding?
- Food security
- Housing quality
- Household chaos
- Household composition
- Income
Design and characterisitics of the Infant Care Project
Design: Prospective study of 217 first-time, African-American mother-infant pairs
* Recruited from WIC clinics in central North Carolina
* Followed from 3 to 18 months postpartum with in-home visits
Characteristics
* 70% of mothers overweight or obese
* Low prevalence of breastfeeding
Infant Care Project: Feeding patterns in the first 3 months
Only 20% exclusively breastfed at 1 month and decreases to 6% by 3 months
Infant Care Project: Types of complementary foods fed at 3 months
- Foods were given through bottle because thought to help baby sleep throughout the night
Infant Care Project: What happens as children age in terms of nutritional intake?
intake of junk foods increases
Infant Care Project: How did moms typically base feeding patterns?
Fussy babies were more likely to be given CF before 4 months of age
* Those who were fussy were given the complimentary foods and thinking it meant babies were hungry
* or if they were active thought they were expending more energy and needed more than what milk could support
Infant Care Project: Household composition association with feeding patterns
Moms were often very young and still lived with parents which had an influence on feeding patterns
* With grandmothers or fathers saw less breastfeeding
* Having dad meant less likely to receive complimentary foods early and grandmother saw more