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Textured Food Introduction Information and Parental Feeding Practices

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Feeding Practices
Food Acceptance
Interventions
Behavioral: Counselling on textured food introduction between 8 and 15 months
Registration Number
NCT04570059
Lead Sponsor
Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to conduct an intervention with 60 parents of 8 months old children to test the effect of recommendations, compared to usual care, promoting the introduction of textured foods between 8 and 15 months on parental practices of use of textured foods and the effect of such practices on children acceptance for a variety of textured foods.

Detailed Description

The intervention tests the effect of providing parents with recommendations on textured food introduction between 8 and 15 months on their practices of offering of textured foods and their child's acceptance of textured foods. The intervention consists of advice and tips on the why and how introducing textured food during complementary feeding, which were not address in French national guidelines (Programme National Nutrition Santé (PNNS)) at the start of the study. Advise were developped from current literature knowledge and recommendations in other countries. They are accompanied with monthly counselling via phone calls by dietician and two baskets containing food preparation utensils and commercial textured foods. The intervention group (n=30) benefits from this intervention. The control group (n=30) receive general information on healthy eating provided by the food guides of the PNNS, phone calls collecting general information and 2 baskets containing baby gifts.

Acceptance is evaluated experimentally pre and post intervention in a laboratory setting evaluating children swallowing foods of different textures.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
64
Inclusion Criteria
  • parents ages ≥ 18 years old
  • children born full term (≥37 weeks) and with weight ≥2500 g
  • children introduced to complementary feeding after 4 months and before 6 months
Exclusion Criteria
  • children with episode of tube feedings, chronic disease, allergy and gastroesophageal reflux requiring medication
  • children introduced to complementary feeding with baby-led weaning method
  • children already involved in another study on eating behaviour

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention programCounselling on textured food introduction between 8 and 15 monthsIntervention group
Usual CareCounselling on textured food introduction between 8 and 15 monthsControl group
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Food texture exposure scoreEnd of intervention (15 months)

Food texture introduction assessed using a questionnaire developed to characterize the pattern of food texture exposure in French children aged 4-36 months (Demonteil et al., 2018). This questionnaire is composed of 188 items representing 61 foods commonly used in France in different texture combinations (puree, pieces, raw, cooked, etc.). Each food-texture combination present in the questionnaire is classified into one of three texture levels: 'purees' (soft and rough; T1 texture level), 'small/soft pieces' (T2 texture level) and 'hard/big pieces and double texture' (T3 texture level) . The number of introduced items is evaluated for each texture level (T1, T2 and T3), and a global child exposure score (TexExp) is calculated from the sum of all introduced items.

Textured food acceptance: scalePre and post intervention (8 and 15 months)

Food texture acceptance is assessed during lab experiments. At each age, children participate in two experimental sessions in which they are offered several foods varying in texture. For each age, for a given child, the two sessions are planned during the same week. During one session, four different foods are offered to the child. Three trials of each food is run, trial offering is stopped after three consecutive refusals is emitted by the child. Experimenter evaluate whether the child swallow the trial. Acceptance is determined for each food as % of trial swallowed. Global acceptance outcome is calculated as the sum of frequency observed for each food.

Parents evaluate the infant's liking of the food on a linear scale for each food trial.

At the end of intervention, acceptance for 2 commercial baby food products is assessed by parents in home-setting. The parent records the weight of food eaten (g) and children 's liking of this food on a 9 point scale.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Child feeding skillsPre and post intervention (8 and 15 months)

During the experimental session aiming at evaluating acceptance, the experimenter evaluate a set of behaviours : 'looks at the food', 'manipulate the food with fingers', 'puts the foods in the mouth with fingers/spoon', 'sucking', 'gagging', 'chewing', 'coughing/risk of chocking', 'has difficulties wih the food'.

Parents will report children general feeding skills (holding a spoon in the mouth alone, eating with fingers, self-feeding with a fork, gagging) on a 4-point scale.

Number of teethPre and post intervention (8 and 15 months)

Parents report the number of teeth visible in their child mouth

Salivary flow ratePre and post intervention (8 and 15 months)

Measured during experimental session using a cotton swab method (Salivette®, Sarsedt) for a 45-sec duration. Saliva collection was realized by the parent maintaining the swab for 45 seconds in child's mouth. The weight of the swab (g) is determined before and after collection and the exact exposure time (sec) is measured by the experimenter.

Mesured weight and time are combined to determine flow rate (in g.min-1).

Other maternal feeding practicesend of intervention (15 months)

At the end of intervention, parents report if they search for information on texture introduction during the study. The type of foods offered (home-made or commercial foods), sharing meal with family and their motivation when buying food is assessed using dedicated questionnaires.

A post-intervention interviews, organized after the end of the study allow to debrief with participants on their study participation.

Children eating behaviour12 months

Parent-reports using a Child Eating Behaviour Questionnaire adapted for toddlers (CEBQ-T) which is a validated questionnaire. The questionnaire is composed of 31 items. Parent answers to each item using a 6 category scale (never, rarely, sometimes, often, always, I don't know).The items are then grouped to define 7 dimensions : 'food responsiveness', 'enjoyment of food', 'satiety responsiveness', 'food fussiness', 'slowness in eating', 'emotional over-eating', and 'external food cue responsiveness'.Higher scores mean higher behaviours.

Children chewing efficiencyPre and post intervention (8 and 15 months)

Determined during experimental session from children's ability to comminute a model gel. The gel is inserted in a mesh feeder and offered to the child for a 60s oral processing duration. Gel particles are collected from the feeder and photographed. The number of formed particles is used as marker of chewing efficiency.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Centre des Sciences du Goût et de l'Alimentation

🇫🇷

Dijon, France

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