Infant feeding practices and maternal dietary intake among Latino immigrants in California.

Sylvia Guendelman, Anna Maria Siega-Riz
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引用次数: 26

Abstract

Mothers of 8-16-month-old infants were surveyed to examine infant feeding practices and maternal dietary intake associated with increased years of residency by Mexican immigrant families (n = 1093 mother-infant pairs). Mothers were recruited from San Diego and Contra Costa counties in California during 1992-93. Twenty-nine percent of Mexican mothers living in the United States for <6 years breastfed their infants exclusively for at least 16 weeks; only 20% of mothers living in the United States between 6 and 15 years and 17% of mothers residing in the United States for over 15 years engaged in exclusive breastfeeding. Neither breastfeeding duration nor the introduction of solids differed by years of residency. In contrast, maternal dietary intake varied markedly. Second generation mothers and those living in the United States the longest had significantly higher intakes of vegetables, low fat milk, salty snacks, animal protein, and cereals. Beyond early caregiving practices, the influence of years of residency on the diets of toddlers is less than that of the mothers.

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加利福尼亚拉丁裔移民的婴儿喂养习惯和母亲的饮食摄入。
对8-16个月婴儿的母亲进行调查,以检查墨西哥移民家庭的婴儿喂养习惯和母亲的饮食摄入量与居住年限的增加有关(n = 1093对母婴)。这些母亲是1992- 1993年间从加州圣地亚哥和康特拉科斯塔县招募的。29%的墨西哥母亲住在美国
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