母乳喂养对 12 至 36 个月儿童的影响:对多米尼加幼儿发展评估系统标准化研究的二手数据分析

IF 1.9 3区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Laura V. Sánchez-Vincitore , Daniel Cubilla-Bonnetier , María Elena Valdez , Angie Jiménez , Paulette Peterson , Karina Vargas , Arachu Castro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

广泛的研究表明,母乳喂养给儿童带来了许多好处,包括与非母乳喂养的儿童相比,母乳喂养在终身健康、身体发育、认知功能、行为和大脑发育方面的优势。在多米尼加共和国,0-6 个月婴儿的纯母乳喂养率仍然很低,而且由于缺乏监测系统,衡量母乳喂养对儿童早期发展(ECD)的影响具有挑战性。本研究旨在探讨母乳喂养对幼儿发展的影响。我们对多米尼加儿童早期发展测量系统(SIMEDID)进行了二次数据分析,该系统是一种筛查工具,根据多米尼加的国情进行了调整和验证,可测量四个方面的发展:粗大运动、精细运动、语言和社会情感发展。SIMEDID 的数据可与国家幼儿综合护理研究所(INAIPI)生成的其他数据集(包括母乳喂养信息)进行交叉分析。在 SIMEDID 标准化研究期间对儿童进行了评估。为了确定母乳喂养的影响,我们1)以幼儿发展(ECD)得分作为因变量,以曾经母乳喂养作为自变量,以年龄和性别作为协变量(之前的方差分析证实了出生时的年龄和性别与幼儿发展(ECD)的相关性),进行了协方差分析;2)根据母乳喂养状况分析了发育迟缓的相对风险(RR)。我们对 699 名 12-36 个月大的多米尼加儿童进行了抽样调查,这些儿童在国家儿童研究所(INAIPI,负责管理全面幼儿服务的政府机构)接受服务。结果显示,曾经母乳喂养的儿童在整体幼儿发展方面的得分高于未母乳喂养的儿童;语言和精细动作发展方面的得分较高是造成这种影响的主要原因。而从未接受母乳喂养的儿童在精细动作和社会情感发育方面发育迟缓的风险更大。这些发现强调了促进和支持母乳喂养对改善儿童神经发育成果的重要性。在资源匮乏的环境中,这一点尤为重要,因为那里的母亲可能需要额外的支持。此外,研究结果还证明了 SIMEDID 的有效性,有助于为今后的研究和循证决策提供信息,从而在类似情况下实现最佳的幼儿发展。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The impact of ever breastfeeding on children ages 12 to 36 months: A secondary data analysis of the standardization study of the Dominican system for evaluating early childhood development

Extensive research has shown that breastfeeding offers many benefits to children, including advantages in lifelong health, physical development, cognitive function, behavior, and brain development, compared to those not breastfed. In the Dominican Republic, the prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding among infants aged 0–6 months remains low, and the lack of a surveillance system has made it challenging to measure the impact of breastfeeding on early childhood development (ECD). This study aims to address the effect of ever breastfeeding on ECD. We conducted secondary data analysis from the Dominican System for Measuring Early Childhood Development (SIMEDID), a screening tool adapted and validated to the Dominican context that measures four areas of development: gross-motor, fine-motor, language, and socioemotional development. The data from SIMEDID can be cross-analyzed with other datasets generated by the National Institute for Early Childhood Comprehensive Care (INAIPI) that include information about breastfeeding. The children were evaluated during the standardization study of SIMEDID. To determine the breastfeeding impact, we: 1) conducted an analysis of covariance using ECD scores as dependent variables and ever breastfed as the independent variable, with age and sex as covariates (previously confirmed with an analysis of variance indicating the relevance of age and sex at birth in ECD); 2) analyzed the relative risk (RR) of developmental delay by breastfeeding status. We studied a sample of 699 Dominican children aged 12–36 months who receive services at INAIPI (the government institution responsible for administering comprehensive early childhood services). The results show that ever breastfed children had higher scores in overall ECD than those who were not; higher scores in language and fine motor development primarily drove this effect. The never breastfed group had a greater risk of developmental delay in fine motor and socioemotional development. These findings underscore the importance of promoting and supporting breastfeeding to improve child neurodevelopmental outcomes. This is particularly relevant in low-resource settings, where mothers may need additional support. Moreover, the study’s results provide evidence of SIMEDID’s validation, which can help inform future research and evidence-based decision-making toward optimal ECD in similar contexts.

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来源期刊
Infant Behavior & Development
Infant Behavior & Development PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL-
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
4.80%
发文量
94
期刊介绍: Infant Behavior & Development publishes empirical (fundamental and clinical), theoretical, methodological and review papers. Brief reports dealing with behavioral development during infancy (up to 3 years) will also be considered. Papers of an inter- and multidisciplinary nature, for example neuroscience, non-linear dynamics and modelling approaches, are particularly encouraged. Areas covered by the journal include cognitive development, emotional development, perception, perception-action coupling, motor development and socialisation.
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