Journal ArticleOpen Access
Comparisons of complementary feeding indicators and associated factors in children aged 6–23 months across five South Asian countries
Authors
Author Affiliations
University of Colombo, Western Sydney University, Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences, Nepal Development Research Institute, ...
Published InMaternal and Child Nutrition
Year2011
Citations205
Abstract
Improving infant and young child feeding practices will help South Asian countries achieve the Millennium Development Goal of reducing child mortality. This paper aims to compare key indicators of complementary feeding and their determinants in children aged 6-23 months across five South Asian countries - Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The latest Demographic and Health Survey and National Family Health Survey India data were used. The analyses were confined to last-born children aged 6-23 months - 1728 in Bangladesh, 15,028 in India, 1428 in Nepal, 2106 in Sri Lanka and 443 infants aged 6-8 months in Pakistan. Introduction of solid, semi-solid or soft foods, minimum dietary diversity, minimum meal frequency and minimum acceptable diet, and their significant determinants…
View at Publisher
BORR does not host full-text PDFs. The button above takes you to the original publisher.