logo
POST TIME: 27 August, 2018 00:00 00 AM
Milk intake reduces childhood stunting in Bangladesh
International Food Policy Research Institute study reveals
UNB

Milk intake reduces childhood stunting in Bangladesh

Milk consumption has a large impact on linear growth in the crucial first 1,000 days of an infant’s life, potentially reducing stunting by as much as 10.4 point among children in Bangladesh, according to a new study done by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), reports UNB.

“Increasing access to dairy products can be extremely beneficial to the nutrition and long-term health of children 6-23 months of age when incorporated into a diet that includes good breastfeeding practices,” says Derek Headey, Senior Research Fellow, IFPRI, and lead author of the study.

“Given almost half of children in rural Bangladesh are stunted, increasing dairy consumption among children and women of childbearing age should be a central priority for nutritional strategies in Bangladesh.”

An IFPRI press release said on Sunday that Bangladesh has low levels of per capita milk consumption - less than half those of neighbouring India - due to several factors like severe land constraints and historical unavailability of milk.

Stunting, or short height for age, is important public health indicator. Over a third of Bangladesh’s under-five years’ old children are stunted.

Milk production and consumption have long been strongly linked to child growth in European and African populations, but little research has focused on Asian nations.

Published recently in the journal, Economics and Human Biology, this new study - ‘Household dairy production and child growth: Evidence from Bangladesh,’ authored by IFPRI’s Derek Headey and University of London’s Samira Choudhury, examines the impact of dairy consumption and production on child nutritional outcomes while comparing the influence on breastfeeding.

The study utilises the nationally representative Bangladesh Integrated Household Survey (BIHS) of rural areas over two rounds 2011/12 and 2015.

“This finding is especially important as growth faltering appears to be particularly pronounced from roughly 6 months of age to 20 months of age, a period that coincides with the introduction of complementary foods, such as rice, that are often low in protein and micronutrients that aid growth and development,” says Headey.

Dairy is high in all three macronutrients (energy, fat and protein), as well as important micronutrients such as vitamin A, vitamin B12, and calcium.

However, the study also finds some evidence that household dairy availability can have negative effects on breastfeeding in the first year of life. Households that produce their own milk are 22 percentage points less likely to breastfeed their children in the first year of life, suggesting dairy-oriented nutrition strategies need to proactively promote exclusive breastfeeding in the first six months to prevent premature substitution into dairy.

“Our results provide a further rationale for utilising campaigns aimed at improving nutritional knowledge, especially the need to reduce the perception that dairy products can be a substitute for breastmilk,” says Headey.

Childhood under-nutrition is increasingly recognised as a significant global health problem and a major constraint to economic development.

Under-nutrition is associated with nearly 3.1 million childhood deaths and can impair cognitive and physical development in early childhood, as well as education and earnings later in life.

Nutritionists have emphasized that good nutrition in early childhood, specifically in the first 1,000 days of life, is the most essential for ensuring healthy growth for the entirety of one’s life.

Researchers’ analysis in this study corroborate that dairy consumption is most beneficial in this first 1,000 days period.

The International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI) seeks sustainable solutions for ending hunger and poverty. IFPRI was established in 1975 to identify and analyze alternative national and international strategies and policies for meeting the food needs of the developing world, with particular emphasis on low-income countries and on the poorer groups in those countries.