An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia

A longitudinal feeding study of 154 infants in Southwest Virginia was conducted during 1978-1980. The incidence of vitamin and mineral supplementation among these infants was the focus of the retrospective study discussed here. With the use of the Nutritional Analysis System of Louisiana State Uni...

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Main Author: Favret, Jenny C.
Other Authors: Human Nutrition and Foods
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101275
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-1012752021-01-09T05:32:22Z An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia Favret, Jenny C. Human Nutrition and Foods LD5655.V855 1986.F397 Infants -- Nutrition -- Virginia Vitamins in human nutrition A longitudinal feeding study of 154 infants in Southwest Virginia was conducted during 1978-1980. The incidence of vitamin and mineral supplementation among these infants was the focus of the retrospective study discussed here. With the use of the Nutritional Analysis System of Louisiana State University, nutrient adequacy levels were determined. Vitamin D, vitamin E, folacin, vitamin B-6, and iron were the problem nutrients identified through this analysis. Inappropriate infant feeding practices such as the use of low iron formulas, the use of cow's milk, and the consumption of inadequate milk volume were blamed for these dietary deficiencies. Routine vitamin supplementation was common among infants of all feeding types. While much of the supplementation was unnecessary, large percentages of infants demonstrated a need for it. The exception was vitamin A. None of the infants who received supplemental vitamin A had inadequate dietary intakes of this nutrient. Supplementation was not shown to have an effect on weight or length gain measurements. Parents should be given specific infant feeding instructions prior to hospital discharge. Included should be a list of the circumstances which would indicate the need for supplementation. M.S. 2020-12-14T16:35:08Z 2020-12-14T16:35:08Z 1986 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101275 en OCLC# 15254597 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ix, 124 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1986.F397
Infants -- Nutrition -- Virginia
Vitamins in human nutrition
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1986.F397
Infants -- Nutrition -- Virginia
Vitamins in human nutrition
Favret, Jenny C.
An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia
description A longitudinal feeding study of 154 infants in Southwest Virginia was conducted during 1978-1980. The incidence of vitamin and mineral supplementation among these infants was the focus of the retrospective study discussed here. With the use of the Nutritional Analysis System of Louisiana State University, nutrient adequacy levels were determined. Vitamin D, vitamin E, folacin, vitamin B-6, and iron were the problem nutrients identified through this analysis. Inappropriate infant feeding practices such as the use of low iron formulas, the use of cow's milk, and the consumption of inadequate milk volume were blamed for these dietary deficiencies. Routine vitamin supplementation was common among infants of all feeding types. While much of the supplementation was unnecessary, large percentages of infants demonstrated a need for it. The exception was vitamin A. None of the infants who received supplemental vitamin A had inadequate dietary intakes of this nutrient. Supplementation was not shown to have an effect on weight or length gain measurements. Parents should be given specific infant feeding instructions prior to hospital discharge. Included should be a list of the circumstances which would indicate the need for supplementation. === M.S.
author2 Human Nutrition and Foods
author_facet Human Nutrition and Foods
Favret, Jenny C.
author Favret, Jenny C.
author_sort Favret, Jenny C.
title An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia
title_short An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia
title_full An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia
title_fullStr An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia
title_full_unstemmed An incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in Southwest Virginia
title_sort incidence study of vitamin and mineral supplementation among infants in southwest virginia
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101275
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