Journal of International Medical Research (Jul 2018)

Continuation of oral nutritional supplementation supports continued growth in nutritionally at-risk children with picky eating behaviour: A post-intervention, observational follow-up study

  • Apurba K. Ghosh,
  • Bala Kishore,
  • Irfan Shaikh,
  • Vinita Satyavrat,
  • Anil Kumar,
  • Tapan Shah,
  • Prahlad Pote,
  • Sandeep Shinde,
  • Yatin Berde,
  • Yen Ling Low,
  • Verena M.H. Tan,
  • Dieu. T. T. Huynh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0300060518766982
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 46

Abstract

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Objectives To evaluate the 120-day post-intervention growth trajectory of picky-eating children aged 2 to 6 years who previously completed a 90-day, randomized, controlled trial of oral nutritional supplementation (ONS) plus dietary counselling (DC) (SDC, n = 98) compared with DC alone (n = 105). Methods A total of 203 children were included. Children were free to consume ONS during follow-up. Information on ONS consumption was collected. Weight-for-age percentile (WAP) and height-for-age percentile (HAP) were measured at Day 90 (beginning) and Day 210 (end point). Results Despite continued weight gain, there was a significant decline in WAP in both groups during the post-intervention period. However, children who took ONS voluntarily had a smaller loss in WAP compared with those who did not. Children in the SDC group showed no difference in a decline in HAP between those who took ONS during follow-up and those who did not. However, children in the DC group showed a marginally larger decline in HAP in those who did not take ONS during the follow-up compared with those who did. Conclusions Continued parental self-administration of ONS to their children slows down the loss of growth percentiles, supporting continued weight gain in picky-eating children at nutritional risk.