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Journal of Tropical Pediatrics 1996 42(3):170-172; doi:10.1093/tropej/42.3.170
© 1996 by Oxford University Press
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brief-report

Early Complementary Feeding is Associated with Low Nutritional Status of Young Infants Recovering from Diarrhoea

Rukhsana Haider, MBBS, MSc, Asma Islam, MBBS, MPH, Iqbal Kabir, MBBS, PhD and Demissie Habte, MD

International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research Bangladesh

Correspondence: Rukhsana Haider, MBBS, MSc (Lond), Associate Scientist, ICDDR,B, GPO Box 128, Dhaka 1000, Bangladesh

Young infants admitted to hospital for diarrhoea were studied to identify and understand the reasons for early complementary feeding and to examine its effect on nutritional status. Of 132 infants, 71 per cent were being breastfed, 24 per cent had already stopped, and 5 per cent had never been breastfed. Complementary feeds were started by the mothers when infants' median age (range) was 27 (1–180) days. Mothers' perceptions regarding breastmilk being insufficient (53 per cent) or causing diarrhoea (19 per cent), were the major reasons for complementary feeding. The mean weight-for-age of the infants given complementary feeds before the age of 2 months was 72 per cent of the National Centre for Health Statistics (NCHS) standards, compared to 82 per cent in those starting after 2 months of age (P = 0.01). Similarly, the mean weight-for-length in these two groups were 86 and 91 per cent, respectively (P=0.04). Initiation of early complementary feeding is associated with infant malnutrition and this alarming trend should be strongly discouraged.


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