View clinical trials related to Infant Nutrition Disorders.
Filter by:The 2016 WHO antenatal care guidelines stated that pregnant women in undernourished populations should receive fortified balanced energy-protein (BEP) supplements to reduce the risk of stillbirth and small-for-gestational-age birth. However, acceptable supplements and delivery channels must be determined for different contexts. The present proposal therefore will 1) perform a formative study to identify the most suitable (acceptability and utilization) BEP supplement for pregnant women in rural Burkina Faso (phase 1) and 2) evaluate the efficacy of this supplement to improve birth weight, fetal and infant growth (phase 2). The nutritional composition of the BEP supplement was established during an expert convening at the BMGF in September 2016. Private sector partners will prepare the supplements in the selected forms with the recommended nutrient composition.
The purpose of this study is to compare standardized nutrition therapy provided by a registered dietitian (RD) at regularly scheduled intervals to usual care in terms of the ability to improve growth parameters in medically complex infants in the pediatric outpatient setting.
The Mazira Project is a study of the effect of egg consumption on growth, development and gut health of infants in Malawi. The study randomly assigns infants to receive one egg per day over six months or to receive an equivalent value of food at the end of six months. Growth, achievement of developmental milestones, gut microbiome composition and other measures of nutritional status are compared between the two groups to determine whether regular egg consumption benefits Malawian infants.
Today the majority of pregnant women in the United States are either overweight or obese at conception with their offspring having greater adiposity at birth, a 2-fold greater risk of later obesity, and neonatal insulin resistance. It was long thought that breast milk composition was fairly uniform among women, having been optimized through evolutionary time to provide adequate sole nutrition for the growing infant regardless of the environmental circumstances. However, recent evidence shows that breast milk is a highly complex fluid with significant inter-individual variation in hormonal and cytokine concentrations. Pervasive maternal obesity is an evolutionarily novel condition for the human species but little effort has yet been made to systematically examine how this novel condition is associated with breast milk adipose-tissue derived hormone and cytokine (adipocytokine) variation, or whether that variation relates to infant metabolic status. The objective of this study is to comprehensively assess the "lactational programming" hypothesis, that is, whether or not recently documented variation in breast-milk composition is related to both maternal adiposity and to infant metabolic status. The central hypothesis is that a graded, dose-response relationship between maternal adiposity and adipocytokine concentrations in breast milk exists and that milk adipocytokine concentrations are associated with altered body composition in their exclusively breast-fed offspring. The results of the study will be used to design interventions to reduce maternal weight during pregnancy and lactation and to augment lactation education materials to focus on the needs of obese breast-feeding women.
Between February 2008 and February 2009, 500 infant-mother pairs in Bhaktapur, Nepal were randomly selected in this nutritional survey. The dietary intake, nutritional status of several nutrients, growth, and breastfeeding habits were measured in both the women and their infants.The objective of this first phase was to estimate the intake and status of several nutrients in relation to breastfeeding. These mother-child pairs were revisited around the child's fifth birthday when growth, diet, and neurodevelopment was measured. The objective of this phase was to create a cohort study where factors in infancy could be related with health outcomes and development 5 years later.
Prevention of malnutrition in infants and children requires access and intake of nutritious food starting at birth with exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life, breastfeeding in combination with complementary foods from 6-24 months of age, access to clean drinking water and sanitation, access to preventive and curative health care (including prenatal). In Ghana, the Demographic and Health Survey of 2014 reports rates of stunting, wasting and underweight in children aged 0-59 months are 28%, 14% and 9% respectively. Furthermore, height for age starts dropping from age 4-6 months with children aged 6-23 months being more likely to be stunted (40%) than those below 6 months (4%). Infant and young child feeding data show that for breast-fed children ranging from 6 months through 35 months of age, cereals are predominantly the first foods introduced in the diet (6-8 months of age). As the child grows older, consumption of fruits rich in Vitamin A, other fruits and vegetables and meat, fish, poultry and eggs are reported by the mothers. The Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) found that the proportion of breast fed children aged 6-23 months who received a recommended variety of foods the minimum number of times per day increases with child's age from 28% in children 6-8 months to 50% in children aged 18-23 months. The study objective is to examine the effect of providing a macro- and micro-nutrient fortified complementary food supplement (KokoPlusTM) on growth and nutritional status of Ghanaian infants.
Undernutrition and poor cognitive development affect many children under 5 in developing countries, who are exposed to multiple risk factors including poverty, malnutrition, poor health, and unstimulating home environments. The optimum development and growth of young children requires affection and responsiveness from the mother/caregiver, cognitive stimulation, good nutrition and infection control. In Bangladesh, stimulation at home is generally poor and contributes to children's poorer development. It is important to show that psychosocial stimulation programmes through home visits integrated into the feeding programmes can benefit children's growth and development. This study will help to fill this evidence gap about effective interventions to improve infant and young child growth and development in Bangladesh. Considering the high prevalence of undernutrition and low prevalence of stimulating environments in Bangladesh, it is important to show evidence that integrating infant feeding counselling and psychosocial stimulation activities result in optimum child growth & development. To determine if combined infant feeding counselling and psychosocial stimulation programme (promoting mothers positive parenting) starting in the 3rd trimester of pregnancy, further improves: children's cognitive, motor and language development along with growth and mothers' child rearing and child-feeding knowledge and practices compared to peer counselling alone or usual health messages only. We used a community-based CRCT to examine the impact of a peer counselling infant feeding education program with psychosocial stimulation starting in the third trimester of pregnancy to one year after delivery, to improve child growth and cognition, language, behaviour and psychomotor development compared to a control group receiving usual health messages. The outcome assessments were made on a cohort of infant-mother dyads measured at baseline and at follow up visits. Outcome assessments were conducted with all the mother-infant pairs recruited in the community clusters in the study, with an expected total of 334 mother-infant dyads (167 in each treatment group).The main outcomes are children's growth, cognition, language, behaviour and psychomotor development
This study aimed to evaluate the tolerance and safety of a low-protein formula in healthy full-term infants by investigating effects on growth and gastrointestinal tolerance and by identifying any adverse effects.
The advancement in life-saving technologies and clinical expertise in the care of extremely premature infants, have resulted in the development of large neonatal intensive care units (NICU). It has been suggested that reconstruction of megaunits of neonatal intensive care to smaller care units with specific patient population and clinical team providers will be essential to maintain optimal teamwork, quality of care and patient outcome. Despite the growing knowledge around the need for reconstruction of large NICUs to smaller units of care, there is no evidence regarding the safety and efficacy of microsystem model of care on the key aspects of health care. At the McMaster Children's Hospital (MCH), we planned a change from standard model of care to the microsystem model of care and therefore we aimed to prospectively assess the effect of this organizational change on the variable aspects of health care. A working group met weekly to formulate the implementation planning, to review the adaptation and adjustment process and to ascertain the quality of implementation following the initiation of the microsystem model. The study was retrospectively registered.
The purpose of this study is to determine the effectiveness of an innovative methodology for training Community Health Workers that will improve their effectiveness in educating mothers to adopt best practice health behaviors in the home.