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The relationship between infants' preceding appetite, illness, and growth performance and mothers' subsequent feeding practice decisions

Ellen G. Piwoz, Robert E. Black, Guillermo Lopez de Romaña, Hilary Creed de Kanashiro and Kenneth H. Brown

Social Science & Medicine, 1994, vol. 39, issue 6, 851-860

Abstract: Data from a longitudinal study of 153 low-income Peruvian infants were used to examine (i) whether infant characteristics such as appetite, illness and past growth performance are related to subsequent changes in their feeding practices (e.g. addition of non-human milks, solid foods, weaning), and (ii) whether this relationship depends on maternal characteristics such as feeding exposure and experience (MFEE). With one exception, infants were breastfed from birth. Feeding practices during the first month of life were related to practices throughout infancy. Most mothers changed their practices once (61%) or twice (34%) from birth to 6 months. Low weight gains from 1 to 2 (P

Date: 1994
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