Variations in infant and childhood vitamin D supplementation programmes across Europe and factors influencing adherence

Author:

Uday Suma1,Kongjonaj Ardita2,Aguiar Magda3,Tulchinsky Ted4,Högler Wolfgang15

Affiliation:

1. 1Department of Endocrinology and Diabetes, Birmingham Children’s Hospital, Birmingham, UK

2. 2MEAL Specialist at Save the Children International, Albania Country Office, Tirana, Albania

3. 3Health Economics Unit, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

4. 4Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine, and Ashkelon College, Ashkelon, Israel

5. 5Institute of Metabolism and Systems Research, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK

Abstract

Background Nutritional rickets is a growing global public health concern despite existing prevention programmes and health policies. We aimed to compare infant and childhood vitamin D supplementation policies, implementation strategies and practices across Europe and explore factors influencing adherence. Methods European Society for Paediatric Endocrinology Bone and Growth Plate Working Group members and other specialists completed a questionnaire on country-specific vitamin D supplementation policy and child health care programmes, socioeconomic factors, policy implementation strategies and adherence. Factors influencing adherence were assessed using Kendall’s tau-b correlation coefficient. Results Responses were received from 29 of 30 European countries (97%). Ninety-six per cent had national policies for infant vitamin D supplementation. Supplements are commenced on day 1–5 in 48% (14/29) of countries, day 6–21 in 48% (14/29); only the UK (1/29) starts supplements at 6 months. Duration of supplementation varied widely (6 months to lifelong in at-risk populations). Good (≥80% of infants), moderate (50–79%) and low adherence (<50%) to supplements was reported by 59% (17/29), 31% (9/29) and 10% (3/29) of countries, respectively. UK reported lowest adherence (5–20%). Factors significantly associated with good adherence were universal supplementation independent of feeding mode (P = 0.007), providing information at neonatal unit (NNU) discharge (P = 0.02), financial family support (P = 0.005); monitoring adherence at surveillance visits (P = 0.001) and the total number of factors adopted (P < 0.001). Conclusions Good adherence to supplementation is a multi-task operation that works best when parents are informed at birth, all babies are supplemented, and adherence monitoring is incorporated into child health surveillance visits. Implementation strategies matter for delivering efficient prevention policies.

Publisher

Bioscientifica

Subject

Endocrinology,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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