Baby food: Difference between revisions
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[[File:US Navy 100201-N-2100S-082 ailors from the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) move jars of baby food onto an aid truck.jpg|thumb|Commercial baby food is often a humanitarian relief item, although delivery of [[infant formula]] is criticized because it can discourage breastfeeding and because the local water supplies may be contaminated after a disaster, making powdered infant formula unsafe.]] |
[[File:US Navy 100201-N-2100S-082 ailors from the Nimitz-class aircraft carrier USS Carl Vinson (CVN 70) move jars of baby food onto an aid truck.jpg|thumb|Commercial baby food is often a humanitarian relief item, although delivery of [[infant formula]] is criticized because it can discourage breastfeeding and because the local water supplies may be contaminated after a disaster, making powdered infant formula unsafe.]] |
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As a global [[public health]] recommendation, the [[World Health Organization]] recommends that infants should be exclusively [[breastfed]] for the first six months of life to achieve optimal growth, development and health. Most six-month-old infants are physiologically and developmentally ready for new foods, textures and modes of feeding.<ref name=" |
As a global [[public health]] recommendation, the [[World Health Organization]] recommends that infants should be exclusively [[breastfed]] for the first six months of life to achieve optimal growth, development and health. Most six-month-old infants are physiologically and developmentally ready for new foods, textures and modes of feeding.<ref name="baby.tips">Baby Tips. [https://baby.tips/baby-nutrition-6-8-months]</ref> Experts advising the [[World Health Assembly]] have provided evidence that introducing solids earlier than six months increases babies' chances of illness, without improving growth.<ref>[http://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/advocacy/labels.html Australian Breastfeeding Association.]</ref> |
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One of the health concerns associated with the introduction of solid foods before six months is [[iron deficiency]]. The early introduction of complementary foods may satisfy the hunger of the infant, resulting in less frequent breastfeeding and ultimately less milk production in the mother. Because iron absorption from human milk is depressed when the milk is in contact with other foods in the proximal small bowel, early use of complementary foods may increase the risk of iron depletion and anemia.<ref name="hc-sc.gc.ca"/> |
One of the health concerns associated with the introduction of solid foods before six months is [[iron deficiency]]. The early introduction of complementary foods may satisfy the hunger of the infant, resulting in less frequent breastfeeding and ultimately less milk production in the mother. Because iron absorption from human milk is depressed when the milk is in contact with other foods in the proximal small bowel, early use of complementary foods may increase the risk of iron depletion and anemia.<ref name="hc-sc.gc.ca"/> |
Revision as of 11:52, 13 January 2015
Baby food is any soft, easily consumed food, other than breastmilk or infant formula, that is made specifically for infants, roughly between the ages of four to six months and two years. The food comes in multiple varieties and tastes; it may be table food that the rest of the family is eating that has been mashed or otherwise broken down, or it can be purchased ready-made from producers.
Readiness
As of 2011, the World Health Organization, UNICEF and many national health agencies recommended waiting until six months of age before starting a child on food;[1] however, individual babies may differ greatly from this guideline based on their unique developmental progress. A good way to know when to introduce baby food is to watch for signs of readiness in the child. Signs of readiness include the ability to sit without help, loss of tongue thrust and the display of active interest in food that others are eating. Baby may be started directly on normal family food if attention is given to choking hazards; this is referred to as baby-led weaning. Because breastmilk takes on the flavor of foods eaten by the mother, these foods are especially good choices.
Health
As a global public health recommendation, the World Health Organization recommends that infants should be exclusively breastfed for the first six months of life to achieve optimal growth, development and health. Most six-month-old infants are physiologically and developmentally ready for new foods, textures and modes of feeding.[2] Experts advising the World Health Assembly have provided evidence that introducing solids earlier than six months increases babies' chances of illness, without improving growth.[3]
One of the health concerns associated with the introduction of solid foods before six months is iron deficiency. The early introduction of complementary foods may satisfy the hunger of the infant, resulting in less frequent breastfeeding and ultimately less milk production in the mother. Because iron absorption from human milk is depressed when the milk is in contact with other foods in the proximal small bowel, early use of complementary foods may increase the risk of iron depletion and anemia.[4]
If there is a family history of allergies, one may wish to introduce only one new food at a time, leaving a few days in between to notice any reactions that would indicate a food allergy or sensitivity. This way, if the child is unable to tolerate a certain food, it can be determined which food is causing the reaction.
As shown in the 2008 Feeding Infants and Toddlers study, the overall diet of babies and toddlers, the primary consumers of baby food, generally meets or significantly exceeds the recommended amount of macronutrients.[5] Toddlers and preschoolers generally ate too little dietary fiber, and preschoolers generally ate too much saturated fat, although the overall fat intake was lower than recommended.[5] Micronutrient levels were typically within the recommended levels. A small group of older infants in the American study needed more iron and zinc, such as from iron-fortified baby foods.[5] A substantial proportion of toddlers and preschoolers exceeded the upper recommended level of synthetic folate, preformed vitamin A, zinc, and sodium (salt).[5]
Preparation and feeding
Baby foods are either a soft, liquid paste or an easily chewed food since babies lack developed muscles and teeth to effectively chew. Babies typically move to consuming baby food once nursing or formula is not sufficient for the child's appetite. Babies do not need to have teeth to transition to eating solid foods. Teeth, however, normally do begin to show up at this age. Care should be taken with certain foods that pose a choking hazard, such as undercooked vegetables, grapes, or food that may contain bones. Babies begin eating liquid style baby food consisting of pureed vegetables and fruits, sometimes mixed with rice cereal and formula, or breastmilk. Then, as the baby is better able to chew, small, soft pieces or lumps may be included. Care should be taken, as babies with teeth have the ability to break off pieces of food but they do not possess the back molars to grind, so food can be carefully mashed or prechewed, or broken into manageable pieces for their baby. Around 6 months of age, babies may begin to feed themselves (picking up food pieces with hands, using the whole fist, or later the pincer grasp [the thumb and forefinger]) with help from parents.
Nutritional needs
Newborns need a diet of breastmilk or infant formula. About 40% of the food energy in these milks comes from carbohydrates, mostly from a simple sugar called lactose. By age two, toddlers need a diet that has a higher carbohydrate level, around 55%.[6]
Types
Through the first year, breastmilk or infant formula is the main source of calories and nutrients. Nestlé's Feeding Infants and Toddlers Study (FITS) of 2008 indicates that few American babies are fed baby food before the age of four months.[7]
Food type
- Cereals
- On a typical day about half of American babies aged four and five months old are fed infant cereal. The baby may have eaten as little as one small bite of infant cereal, or even as little as one small bite of a food that contains infant cereal mixed with other foods. Other types of grain-based foods are rare at that age. About 90% of babies aged six to twelve months eat some type of grain, although only half eat infant cereal. The others eat rice, bread, crackers, pasta, or cereal designed for older children.[7]
- Fruits
- On any given day, about 20% of babies aged four and five months eat some type of fruit, usually a prepared baby food.[7] As with all of these, this may represent as little as one small bite of fruit or a food partly composed of fruit. Two-thirds of babies aged six to nine months, and between 75% and 85% of babies and toddlers older than nine months, eat some type of fruit. At age six to nine months, half of babies are eating prepared baby food fruits, but toddlers aged 12 months and older primarily eat non-baby food fruits, such as fresh bananas or canned fruits. Apple and bananas are common fruits for babies of all ages. Fruit juice, primarily apple and grape juice, is usually introduced later than fruit, and about half of older babies and toddlers drink some type of 100% fruit juice.[7]
- Vegetables
- In a typical day, about a quarter of babies aged four and five months eat some type of vegetable at least once, almost always prepared baby food, and usually a yellow or orange vegetable like carrots, pumpkin, sweet potatoes, and winter squash.[7] At age six to nine months, about 60% of babies and about 70% older babies and toddlers eat vegetables, with baby food vegetables rapidly being replaced by cooked vegetables after about nine months. Raw vegetables are uncommon for all babies and toddlers. By the first birthday, almost a third of babies eat potatoes on a given day.[7]
- Meat
- Very few four- and five-month-old American babies eat meat or other protein source (excluding milk).[7] Six- to nine-month-old babies mostly eat meat as part of a baby food that contains a small amount of meat along with vegetables or grains. About three-quarters of nine- to twelve-month-old babies are given either meat or another protein source, such as eggs, cheese, yogurt, beans, or nuts. More than 90% of babies aged 12 to 18 months old, and nearly all toddlers older than that, are given a protein source at least once a day. Almost three-quarters of these toddlers are given a non-baby food meat; prepared baby food meat (by itself) is uncommon at any age.[7]
- Sweet and salty foods
- Sweet and salty foods are uncommon for babies.[7] Compared to a prior study in 2002, the number of babies under age nine months that received any sort of sweetened food, snack, or beverage, had dropped by nearly half. At age nine to twelve months, fewer than half of babies are given sweetened foods like cookies, ice cream, or fruit-flavored drinks. Prepared baby food desserts are uncommon at any age, but are given to almost 12% of babies age nine to twelve months.[7]
Homemade or commercial
Homemade baby food is less expensive than commercial baby foods.[8] Homemade food is not appropriate unless the family has a sufficient and varied diet as well as access to refrigeration and basic sanitation.[8]
Homemade food requires more preparation time than opening a jar or box of ready-to-eat commercial baby food, as food may need to be minced or pureed for young babies, or cooked separately without the salt, intense spices, or sugar that the family chooses to eat.[8] Some kinds of non-baby foods, such as unsweetened applesauce, cream of wheat cereal, and mashed potatoes, normally have a suitable texture for babies. As the baby gets older, foods with more noticeable texture, like plain, cooked rice, are commonly introduced, until the baby has transitioned completely to eating the family's normal foods.
Toddler foods
Some commercial baby food companies have expanded their lines to produce specialty foods for toddlers from the age of about 12 months to two and a half years old.[9] These include juice, cereal, small microwaveable meals, baked goods, and other foods that have been formulated and marketed for toddlers.
Geriatric use
In the late 1940s, Gerber Products Company and Beech-Nut produced special cookbooks to promote the sale of commercial baby foods for use by elderly, sick, or disabled people.[10]
Picky eating
Parents and caregivers may perceive up to half of toddlers as being "picky" or "faddy", with the peak around 24 months.[11][12] Adults who hold this opinion often stop offering new foods to the child after only three to five attempts, rather than the eight to fifteen tries recommended. They may also engage in counterproductive behaviors, such as offering appetite-suppressing milk or other favorite foods as an alternative, or trying to force or bribe the child into eating.[13]
Historical and cultural
Baby food varies from culture to culture. In many cultures, pastes of a grain and liquids are the first baby food. In human history and presently with many cultures around the world, babies are fed food premasticated by the caretaker of the baby in order to pulverise the food and start the digestion process.[14] An infant's first bite of solid food is ceremonial and holds religious importance in many cultures. An example of this is annaprashan, a Hindu ritual where the infant is fed a sweetened rice porridge, usually blessed, by an elder family member. Similar rites of passage are practiced across Asia, including the Bengal region, Vietnam, and Thailand.[citation needed]
In the Western world until the mid-1900s, baby food was generally made at home. The industrial revolution saw the beginning of the baby food market which promoted commercial baby foods as convenience items.[15] In developed countries, babies are now often started with commercially produced iron-fortified infant cereals,[4] and then move on to mashed fruits and vegetables. Commercial baby foods are widely available in dry, ready-to-feed and frozen forms, often in small batches (e.g. small jars) for convenience of preparation.
Commercially prepared baby foods in the Netherlands were first prepared by Martinus van der Hagen through his NV Nutricia company in 1901.[16] In United States they were first prepared by Harold Clapp who sold Clapp's Baby Food in the 1920s.[17] The Fremont Canning Company, now called the Gerber Products Company, started in 1927.[9] The Beech-Nut company entered the U.S. baby food market in 1931.[18] The first precooked dried baby food was Pablum which was originally made for sick children in the 1930s. Other commercial baby food manufacturers include H. J. Heinz Company, Nestle, Nutricia and Organix. The demand from parents for organic food began to grow in the 1960s[citation needed]; since then, many larger commercial manufacturers have introduced organic lines of infant food.
At the beginning of the 20th century in America, most babies began eating baby food around the age of seven months.[10] During and shortly after World War II, the age at which solid food was first introduced dropped to just six weeks.[10] This age has since increased to four to six months.[10]
In China and other east Asian countries, homemade baby food remains common, and babies are started on rice porridge called xifan, then move on to mashed fruits, soft vegetables, tofu and fish.[19] In Sweden, it is common to start with mashed fruit, such as bananas, as well as oatmeal and mashed vegetables. In western Africa, maize porridge is often the first solid food given to young children.[20]
Controversies
Some commercial baby foods have been criticized for their contents and cost.[21]
Over the decades, there have been multiple recalls of baby foods because of concerns about contamination or spoilage. In 1984 and 1986, Gerber was involved in a scandal over glass baby food jars breaking in transit, which dramatically affected its sales and profitability, although the US Food and Drug Administration later concluded that the company was not at fault.[9] In 1987, Beechnut paid US $25 million to resolve charges of selling adulterated apple juice in the early 1980s.[9] In 2011, Nestlé France decided to recall a batch of P'tit pot baby food as a precautionary measure after a customer reportedly found glass shards in one of their jars. An investigation into the incident's scope led the company to conclude that it had been an isolated occurrence and that the rest of the batch had not been affected.[22]
Market
Commercial baby food is dominated by Gerber, which had about 70% of the American market share in 1996.[9] Beechnut had about 15% of the market, and Heinz had about 10%. Heinz's Earth's Best, the largest brand of organic baby food, had about 2% of the American market share.[9]
In Australia, Canada, and New Zealand, Heinz had about 90% of the market share in 1996.[9] Heinz is also the market leader in the UK, Italy, and several eastern European countries.[9]
See also
- Breastfeeding
- Infant formula
- International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes
- Nestlé boycott
- Organic Baby Products
- Breast feeding benefits
References
- ^ World Health Organization. Online Q&A: What is the recommended food for children in their very early years? Accessed 2 August 2011.
- ^ Baby Tips. [1]
- ^ Australian Breastfeeding Association.
- ^ a b Cite error: The named reference
hc-sc.gc.ca
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b c d Butte NF, Fox MK, Briefel RR; et al. (December 2010). "Nutrient intakes of US infants, toddlers, and preschoolers meet or exceed dietary reference intakes". J Am Diet Assoc. 110 (12 Suppl): S27–37. doi:10.1016/j.jada.2010.09.004. PMID 21092766.
{{cite journal}}
: Explicit use of et al. in:|author=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Stephen A, Alles M, de Graaf C; et al. (July 2012). "The role and requirements of digestible dietary carbohydrates in infants and toddlers". Eur J Clin Nutr. 66 (7): 765–79. doi:10.1038/ejcn.2012.27. PMC 3390559. PMID 22473042.
{{cite journal}}
: Explicit use of et al. in:|author=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d e f g h i j Siega-Riz AM, Deming DM, Reidy KC, Fox MK, Condon E, Briefel RR (December 2010). "Food consumption patterns of infants and toddlers: where are we now?". J Am Diet Assoc. 110 (12): S38–51. doi:10.1016/j.jada.2010.09.001. PMID 21092767.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c Samour, Patricia; King, Kathy (2011-01-07). Pediatric Nutrition. Jones & Bartlett Publishers. p. 92. ISBN 9780763784508. Retrieved 25 January 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Mazze, Edward M.; Michman, Ronald D. (1998). The food industry wars: marketing triumphs and blunders. New York: Quorum. pp. 131–152. ISBN 1-56720-111-3.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d Bentley, Amy. (Fall 2006). "Booming Baby Food: Infant Food and Feeding in Post-WWII America." Michigan Historical Review. 32:2. Pages 63–87. ISSN 0890-1686.
- ^ Carruth BR, Ziegler PJ, Gordon A, Barr SI (January 2004). "Prevalence of picky eaters among infants and toddlers and their caregivers' decisions about offering a new food". J Am Diet Assoc. 104 (1 Suppl 1): s57–64. doi:10.1016/j.jada.2003.10.024. PMID 14702019.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Wright CM, Parkinson KN, Shipton D, Drewett RF (October 2007). "How do toddler eating problems relate to their eating behavior, food preferences, and growth?". Pediatrics. 120 (4): e1069–75. doi:10.1542/peds.2006-2961. PMID 17908727.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Scaglioni S, Arrizza C, Vecchi F, Tedeschi S (December 2011). "Determinants of children's eating behavior". Am. J. Clin. Nutr. 94 (6 Suppl): 2006S–2011S. doi:10.3945/ajcn.110.001685. PMID 22089441.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Holmes, Wendy (2007), "Influences on maternal and child nutrition in the highlands of the northern Lao PDR", Asia Pac J Clin Nutr, 16 (3): 537–545, PMID 17704036
- ^ The Food Timeline-baby food history notes
- ^ Nutricia
- ^ Beck, Julie (24 November 2014). "How Canned Baby Food Became King". The Atlantic. Atlantic Media Company. Retrieved 24 November 2014.
- ^ Our Company, Beech-Nut website, accessed November 30, 2008
- ^ FW-91 - Homemade Baby Food: Fast, Frugal, and Fun | www.japaninc.com
- ^ USA (2011-10-03). "Aflatoxin Exposure after Weaning: Solid Food Contaminant Impairs Growth". Pubmedcentral.nih.gov. Retrieved 2011-10-28.
- ^ Cheating Babies: Nutritional Quality and Cost of Commercial Baby Food
- ^ Pillay, Ravi. "Recall of Nestlé P’tit Pot Recette Banana baby food by Nestlé France.". October 5, 2011. Retrieved October 24, 2011.
External links
- When do I introduce solids?: NHS Choices
- Babies, weaning: NHS Choices
- Solids: the first steps: NHS Choices
- Introducing solid foods: What you need to know from the Mayo Clinic.
- Feeding Tips from the Baby Care Encyclopedia.
- The Evolution of the Baby Food Industry 2000-2008, Federal Trade Commission Working Papers, 2009