The Helen Keller International Food-Frequency Method Underestimates Vitamin A Intake Where Sustained Breastfeeding is Common

A recent innovation in assessing community vitamin A status is the Helen Keller International food-frequency method, which is based on weekly intakes of key foods among pre-school children. Since it excludes breastmilk, we investigated whether the amount of breastmilk received by 40 children aged on...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food and nutrition bulletin 1998, Vol.19 (4), p.343-346
Hauptverfasser: Persson, Viveka, Greiner, Ted, Islam, Sirajul, Gebre-Medhin, Mehari
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container_start_page 343
container_title Food and nutrition bulletin
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creator Persson, Viveka
Greiner, Ted
Islam, Sirajul
Gebre-Medhin, Mehari
description A recent innovation in assessing community vitamin A status is the Helen Keller International food-frequency method, which is based on weekly intakes of key foods among pre-school children. Since it excludes breastmilk, we investigated whether the amount of breastmilk received by 40 children aged one to three years in a rural area of Bangladesh contributed significantly to their vitamin A intake. Vitamin A intake was indirectly calculated from the consumption of breastmilk, which was quantified over a 9-hour period by a test-weighing technique. The estimated mean 24-hour milk intake was 548 g for the 97% who were breastfed at 12 to 23 months and 312 g for the 73% who were breastfed at 24 to 36 months. This represents an average daily intake of 41% and 23% of the safe recommended daily intake (400 RE) for vitamin A, respectively. The Helen Keller International food-frequency method should be revalidated for settings where breastfeeding is sustained beyond infancy.
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title The Helen Keller International Food-Frequency Method Underestimates Vitamin A Intake Where Sustained Breastfeeding is Common
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