4.5 Article

Baby-led weaning in Italy and potential implications for infant development

Journal

APPETITE
Volume 164, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2021.105286

Keywords

Complementary feeding; Infant feeding behavior; Weaning; Infant feeding decisions; Baby-led weaning; Developmental milestones

Funding

  1. Italian Ministry of Education, University and Research, Progetti di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale [2017WH8B84]

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The study showed that infants introduced to solid foods through baby-led weaning were more likely to achieve important developmental milestones, and this approach was associated with self-feeding and lower consumption of pureed foods.
Baby-led weaning is an approach to complementary feeding that emphasizes an infant's ability to self-feed rather than being spoon fed, and to eat minimally-processed foods rather than pure ' ed foods. This study aimed to investigate the variability in infant feeding practices and the possible association with developmental milestones in an Italian population. A sample of 1245 mothers of 6-12 month-old infants completed an online survey about complementary feeding and their infant's attainment of developmental milestones. Infants' eating of family food was positively related to self-feeding and to a lower consumption of pure ' ed foods. As in previous studies in the UK and New Zealand, a baby-led weaning style was positively associated with breastfeeding, exposure to complementary foods around six months of age, earlier exposure to both finger and family foods, and higher interest in family food and shared family meals. Infants who were introduced to solid foods using a baby-led weaning approach were more likely to have met important developmental milestones; when controlling for covariates, percentage of family feeding was positively associated with sitting unsupported at an earlier age and a low spoon-feeding style was associated with crawling at an earlier age. These data suggest that baby-led weaning should be defined more comprehensively. Moreover, its potential influence on developmental domains beyond diet and eating behavior warrants future targeted exploration.

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