Constraints on the delivery of animal-source foods to infants and young children: case studies from five countries

Food Nutr Bull. 2007 Jun;28(2):215-29. doi: 10.1177/156482650702800211.

Abstract

BACKGROUND. Optimal feeding of infants and young children in developing countries includes daily feeding of animal-source foods. OBJECTIVE. To evaluate constraints on the availability of animal-source foods at the community level, access to animal-source foods at the household level, and intake of animal-source foods at the individual level among children under 3 years of age in case studies in five developing countries: Mexico, Peru, Haiti, Senegal, and Ethiopia.

Methods: Data were obtained from published and unpublished research and from program experiences of health and agriculture specialists.

Results: In Ethiopia, 27% to 51% of case-study children had consumed an animal-source food on the previous day; from 56% to 87% of children in the other case-study sites had consumed an animal-source food on the previous day. Data on intake of animal-source foods in grams were only available for the Latin American case-study sites, where daily milk intake was high in Mexico and Peru (195 and 180 g/day, respectively) and the intakes of meat, fish, and poultry (MFP) (29.0 and 13.6 g/day) and of egg (18.4 and 4.9 g/day) were low. The conceptual model guiding this work identified more constraining factors at the community and household levels than at the individual level. The most common constraints on feeding animal-source foods to young children were poverty, animal health, and land degradation at the community level; cost of animal-source foods and limited livestock holdings at the household level; and caregivers' perceptions of giving animal-source foods to children at the individual level.

Conclusions: For program planning, it is useful to simultaneously consider factors that affect community availability of household access to, and children's intake of animal-source foods. Efforts to overcome individual-level constraints on intake of animal-source foods should be coupled with activities to address community and household constraints.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Animals
  • Child Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
  • Child, Preschool
  • Dairy Products*
  • Developing Countries
  • Diet*
  • Ethiopia
  • Female
  • Food Supply*
  • Haiti
  • Humans
  • Infant
  • Male
  • Meat*
  • Mexico
  • Middle Aged
  • Nutritive Value
  • Peru
  • Poverty
  • Senegal