Abstract

The infant and child feeding index (ICFI) is a single summary World Health Organization influenced index to assess feeding quality in infants and young children aged 6-36months. This study aimed to demonstrate any associations between ICFI and nutritional status in a single Thai center. The demographic data and feeding practices of healthy infants and children aged 6-36months were collected from questionnaires given to 304 parents/caregivers; anthropometric measurements were taken. Associations between ICFI and weight-for-age Z scores (WAZ), length/height for age Z scores (LAZ/HAZ), weight-for-length/height Z scores (WLZ/WHZ), and body mass index-for-age Z scores (BAZ) were examined. The mean ICFI was 6.14 ± 1.63 and was lowest in the 6-8months age group. Breastfed infants had significantly higher ICFI scores than those not breastfed. Factors influencing ICFI were infant age and milk volume intake. The ICFI was negatively associated with WAZ, WLZ/WHZ, and BAZ (β = -0.13, P = 0.037; β = -0.17, p=0.01; β = -0.15, P = 0.026, respectively). Breastfeeding was also negatively associated with WAZ, LAZ/HAZ, WLZ/WHZ, and BAZ. This study demonstrated a negative association between the ICFI and nutritional status. Breastfeeding may have obscured some positive effects from appropriate feeding practices, while dairy consumption may have hidden negative outcome from inappropriate ones. Despite the ICFI appearing to reflect infant and young child feeding behaviors, using the ICFI alone may not accurately reveal nutritional status.

Full Text
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