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Health first, convenience second: Caregiver perspectives of commercially produced complementary foods in five Southeast Asian capital cities

Helen Walls, Alissa M. Pries, Saipin Chotivichien, Phương Huỳnh, Umi Fahmida, Jessica Blankenship

2023Maternal and Child Nutrition16 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Caregivers in low‐ and middle‐income countries increasingly feed commercially produced complementary foods (CPCF) to older infants and young children—shaped by factors including industry promotion. The dynamics of CPCF consumption and caregiver knowledge, attitudes and behaviours regarding complementary feeding practices are poorly understood in these settings. We examined how caregiver knowledge/attitudes/behaviours about CPCF shape the feeding of older infants and young children in the capital cities of five countries in Southeast Asia (Bangkok, Hanoi, Jakarta, Kuala Lumpur, Manila). An online, web‐based, cross‐sectional panel survey was conducted among mothers of a child aged 6−23 months. One hundred participants were included in each of the five capital cities. Questionnaires were undertaken in the official language of each city. Data were analysed in Stata (version 17.0), using χ 2 tests to examine difference between variables of interest. All mothers purchased CPCF for their youngest child aged 6−23 months at the time of survey. CPCF were commonly fed to children at least once per day, and in many of the five cities at most or every feeding. While factors such as convenience and affordability influenced CPCF purchase, mothers primarily purchased CPCF for nutritional reasons. The most common source of feeding information was health care professionals, followed by social media. CPCF are ubiquitous in the diets of older infants and young children of educated middle–upper socioeconomic status mothers in capital cities of Southeast Asia, with perceived healthiness a key driver in selecting CPCF. A strong governmental regulatory response to industry marketing/promotion will be critical to addressing CPCF appropriateness, including health and nutritional claim use.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSocioeconomic statusPromotion (chess)Capital cityEnvironmental healthSocioeconomicsKuala lumpurHealth promotionSocial capitalDeveloping countryConsumption (sociology)Public healthEconomic growthGeographyPopulationNursingBusinessMarketingLawPolitical sciencePoliticsSocial scienceSociologyEconomic geographyEconomicsConsumer Attitudes and Food LabelingChild Nutrition and Water AccessObesity, Physical Activity, Diet
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