Barriers to appropriate complementary feeding and the use of ultra‐processed foods: A formative qualitative study from rural Oromia, Ethiopia

Author:

Tadesse Elazar123ORCID,Abdirahman Ibrahim4,Letta Shiferaw5,Kirby Miles6,Mamo Tigist7,Metaferia Henok7,Oranga Beryl6,Leight Jessica8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Nutrition Department Menelik II Medical and Health Science College Addis Ababa Ethiopia

2. Dunamis Consultancy Addis Ababa Ethiopia

3. Department of Women's and Children Uppsala University Uppsala Sweden

4. Department of Social Work, Faculty of Social Sciences Arsi University Asela Ethiopia

5. Department of Nursing, College of Health Science and Medicine Haramaya University Harar Ethiopia

6. World Vision Washington D.C. USA

7. World Vision Addis Ababa Ethiopia

8. Poverty, Gender and Inclusion Unit International Food Policy Research Institute Washington District of Columbia USA

Abstract

AbstractChildren's consumption of ultra‐processed foods (UPF) is increasing in Ethiopia, but relatively little is known about the specific feeding practices that underlie this pattern. The objective of this study was to explore patterns of consumption of UPF by infants and young children within a broader context of inappropriate complementary feeding practices in extremely poor households in rural Oromia, Eastern Ethiopia. A formative qualitative study was conducted using semistructured interview questionnaires developed drawing on a socioecological model. A total of 16 focus group discussions with mothers (45 respondents), fathers (21 respondents) and grandmothers (23 respondents) of children aged 6–23 months in households that were beneficiaries of the Productive Safety Net Program were conducted, along with four key informant interviews with health workers. Qualitative transcripts were complemented with field notes before qualitative content analysis was applied. The key findings suggest that UPF were widely provided to infants and young children as part of a pattern of suboptimal complementary feeding, including both early and late initiation of complementary foods. In particular, UPF (including juice, biscuits and lipid‐based nutrient supplements) were diluted with or dissolved in water and fed to infants via bottle, often before the recommended age of initiation of 6 months. Mothers and caregivers reported that they perceived the products to be affordably priced and packaged, ready to use and convenient given their time constraints. The level of consumption of UPF and its effects on infant and young child feeding feeding practices and children's nutritional status in rural Ethiopia should be further explored.

Funder

United States Agency for International Development

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Nutrition and Dietetics,Obstetrics and Gynecology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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