Abstract

To evaluate the current status of first food supplement and the nutrition of infants and young children in rural areas inhabited by people of Han, Tibetan, and Yi ethnicities in Sichuan Province, and to explore the relationship between the first ever feeding of food supplement and the nutritional status. Using a multi-stage randomized cluster sampling method, we selected 2 Han counties, 2 Tibetan counties and 2 Yi counties in rural areas of Sichuan Province. These counties were previously defined as economically poor counties, but had since been lifted out of poverty. They were selected for this study before they came out of poverty. Infants and young children of 12-24 months old and their main caregivers from these counties were the subjects of the study. Structured questionnaires were used to collect information concerning the sociodemographic characteristics of infants and young children and their caregivers, and the first complementary feeding for infants and young children. Infant and young children weight scales and length/height tapes were used to collect the weight and length/height data of infants and young children. Unconditional logistic regression was used to analyze the correlation between the behavior of giving supplementary food for the first time to infants and young children and their nutritional status. A total of 1117 pairs of infants and children and their caregivers were investigated. Regarding the time of first supplementary food addition, nearly half of the caregivers in Han areas started adding supplementary food when the infants were 6 months old, accounting for 43.07% (171/397). Most of the caregivers in Yi and Tibetan areas started giving infants and young children supplementary food when they were less than 6 months old, accounting for 77.18% (301/390) and 47.58% (157/330), respectively. In terms of the types of supplementary food added for the first time, caregivers in Han areas mainly used homemade rice cereal, accounting for 41.56% (165/397), caregivers in Tibetan areas mainly used meat, vegetables or fruits and other complementary foods, accounting for 42.12% (139/330), and caregivers in Yi areas mainly used homemade rice cereal, accounting for 46.41% (181/390). The overall malnutrition rate of infants and young children was 28.83% (322/1117) and the malnutrition rate of infants and young children in Han, Tibetan, and Yi areas were 10.58% (42/397), 24.85 (82/330), and 50.77 (198/390), respectively. The regression analysis results show that after controlling for confounding factors, compared with Han areas, it is more likely for infants and young children in Yi areas to be malnourished ( OR=9.49, 95% CI 6.00-15.00). Compared with adding other types of complementary foods for the first time, infants and young children given iron-fortified rice cereal had a lower risk of malnutrition ( OR=0.54, 95% CI0.29-0.99). The multi-ethnic rural areas of Sichuan Province had problems that supplementary foods are added too early, and that the types of supplementary foods added for the first time were not appropriate. In addition, the nutritional status of local infants and young children in these areas was causing concerns. The malnutrition problem of infants and young children was especially prominent in the Yi ethnic areas. Adding iron-fortified rice cereal for the first time could reduce the possibility of malnutrition in infants and young children to a certain extent. It is recommended that attention should be given to the health education intervention of the first supplementary food for infants and young children to effectively improve the nutritional status of infants and young children in these areas.

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