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Bridging Nutritional Gaps

Importance of age specific complementary feeding with appropriate consistency and food diversity
11:08 PM Nov 30, 2024 IST | Guest Contributor
bridging nutritional gaps
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Complementary feeding is defined as the gradual introduction of solid or semi solid foods in addition to breastfeeding from the age of six months onwards. This is a critical period where nutritional gaps are bridged from exclusive breastfeeding towards a full family diet. Important for growth, health, and development, ensuring age specific complementary feeding with appropriate consistency and food diversity is essential. Reasons below highlight the importance of complementary feeding:

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Nutritional Adequacy

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At 6 months, breast milk alone cannot meet the growing nutritional needs of a child. Complementary feeding provides additional energy, protein, and micronutrients such as iron, zinc, and vitamins. Age specific feeding ensures that these nutritional requirements are met without compromising breastfeeding.

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  1. Supporting Growth and Development.

Appropriate feeding practices, age applicable support rapid physical growth, brain development, and strengthening of the immune system in the earliest years. During this critical period, failures or inappropriate feeding can cause growth stunting, wasting, and faltering.

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  1. Prevention of Malnutrition.

Introducing foods of right consistency and diversity prevents malnutrition. Low diversity diet can cause deficiencies in micronutrients like anaemia or vitamin A deficiency, and improper consistency may be detrimental by calorie intake.

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  1. Development of eating habits.

Age specific feeding ensures that food textures change progressively from smooth purees to small, soft pieces and then to family foods. This progression helps with the development of oral motor skills, which include chewing and swallowing, and this is one of the most fundamental abilities that a child needs to maintain for independent feeding.

  1. Promoting Food Acceptance.

Introducing a variety of flavours and textures during complementary feeding helps develop a child’s taste preferences and reduces the risk of picky eating later in life. Exposing children to diverse foods early has been seen to initiate a lifelong habit of healthy eating.

  1. Boosting Immunity.

Complementary feeding that consists of mixed food groups like fruits, vegetables, grains, and protein will ensure the intake of necessary nutrients to boost their child’s immune function, preventing infections and diseases.

  1. Getting Healthy Eating Habits

Age-appropriate feeding promotes healthy eating habits with balanced proportions of food groups. This early exposure sets the basis for an impeccable dieting habit and diminishes the probability of non-communicable diseases such as obesity and diabetes in adulthood.

Key Principles of Age Specific Complementary Feeding.

  1. Start at 6 Months: Start with small amounts of soft, mashed, or pureed foods. Breastfeeding should continue alongside the introduction of solid foods.
  2. Gradual increase in quantity and frequency: Begin with one or two tablespoons per meal and gradually increase as the child grows, with 2–3 meals per day for infants (6–8 months) and 3–4 meals for children (9–12 months), supplemented with healthy snacks.
  3. Homogeneity and Feel:

6–8 months: Pureed or mashed foods for easy swallowing.

9–12 months: Soft and finely chopped foods and finger foods

12–24 months: Family foods with suitable texture.

  1. Variety in Diet: Include all food groups that include carbohydrates, proteins, fats, vitamins, and minerals to ensure a balanced diet. Add nutrient dense foods such as eggs, fish, legumes, fruits, and vegetables to their diet.
  2. Safe and Hygienic Practices: Always prepare and serve food in clean environments to avoid infections.

Challenges and Solutions.

Challenge: Inaccessibility of variety of foods in some countries.

Solution: Utilise locally available and affordable food and educate caregivers about their nutritional values.

Challenge: Certain foods are unaccepted in communities for young children.

Solution: Sensitise communities about the food variety importance.

Challenge: Lack of awareness on appropriate feeding practices.

Solution Encourage nutrition education and counseling from healthcare providers.

In terms of health and development, age appropriate complementary feeding with adequate viscosity and food variety stands out as a pre-requisite. It requires thoughtful decisions that take into account the nutritional needs of the child while supporting skill development and the establishment of healthy eating behaviours over a lifetime. Parents and caregivers guide this process under the advice of healthcare providers and local programs. Investment in optimal feeding practices during this window ensures a foundation for a healthier future.

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