cdnaudy Submitted by
Cécile Duprez-Naudy

More Background on FITS Data

19. October 2009 04:14
The Feeding Infant and Toddler Study 2008 was presented at the ADA Conference & Expo in Denver, Colo. tonight.  The following provide more information about the study release: Background and purpose
  • The Nestlé Feeding Infants and Toddlers Study (FITS) is a dietary intake survey with a large, representative, cross-sectional sample of parents and caregivers that provides information on the eating patterns and nutrient intakes of infants, toddlers and preschoolers living in the United States.
  • The major objective of FITS is to learn about the nutrient intakes and gaps of the youngest U.S. population group and to understand what foods are being consumed at different developmental stages when the diets of young children is rapidly changing.
  • Nestlé FITS 2008 data were collected for a sample of 3,378 children age zero-to-four years and provides important information on what foods are eaten at various different stages of development as children transition from an all milk diet onto the foods of the family.
  • Nestlé FITS 2008 is the second study of its kind. In 2002 Gerber Products Company, now a part of the Nestlé family, commissioned the groundbreaking FITS 2002 dietary survey of 3,000 infants and toddlers ages four--to-24 months, in response to the childhood obesity epidemic.
Design and population
  • The Nestlé 2008 FITS study focused specifically on a few core areas: nutrient intake and food consumption patterns of infants, toddlers, and preschoolers from age zero-to-four years using a standardized 24-hour dietary recall method.
  • Mathematica Policy Research, a nonpartisan research firm, conducted the study on behalf of Nestlé. Mathematica also conducted the FITS 2002 study. The Nutrition Coordinating Center (NCC) at the University of Minnesota worked with Mathematica to collect the dietary recalls.
  • Telephone interviews were conducted to recruit participants, to collect food and nutrient intake data, and to collect additional information on household demographics, growth and development and feeding/consumption patterns.
  • FITS 2008 updates information on the diets of children age four-to-24 months from FITS 2002 and provides new information on the diets of children age 24-48 months.
    • FITS 2002 included a survey of 3,022 infants and toddlers age four-to-24 months
    • FITS 2008 includes 3,378 infants and young children from birth-to-four years of age
A foundation to build on
  • Nestlé FITS 2008 reveals both progress and areas of concern in the diets of young children in the United States. The data show some positive trends versus 2002— infants are being breastfed longer; and fewer infants and toddlers are consuming sweets and sweetened beverages on a given day.  However, other findings are less positive — on a given day, many toddlers and preschoolers aren’t eating a single serving of vegetables or fruit and they are consuming diets less than the recommended 30-to-40 percent of calories from fat.  Most preschoolers are eating too much saturated fat and sodium.
  • FITS 2008 data suggest that parents are hearing and following the feeding guidance for infants, yet there is continued work that needs to be done to reinforce good feeding habits as children become toddlers and preschoolers and begin eating from the family table.
  • More guidance and support is needed to help parents better transition from feeding a baby to meeting the unique nutrition and feeding needs of a toddler or preschooler. The diets of toddlers and preschoolers are mirroring the unhealthy eating patterns often seen in older children and adults.
  • FITS 2002 was the foundation of the Start Healthy, Stay Healthy™ nutrition system, Nestlé’s patent-pending stage-based nutrition system that combines products, education and services to foster healthy growth and development and the early establishment of healthy eating habits from birth to preschool. Start Healthy, Stay Healthy Milestones Symbols™ direct parents to the information and products tailored to their child’s developmental stage. The insights from FITS, along with dietary recommendations from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the National Academy of Sciences/ Institute of Medicine (NAS/ IOM) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) are the foundation of theStart Healthy, Stay Healthy nutrition system, feeding guidelines and resources1.
  • FITS 2008 builds on this foundation with updated research to further understand nutrient intakes and early-childhood eating patterns and to determine whether parents and caregivers have modified the diets of their children. The data will provide new insights on the diets of preschoolers and will help to determine whether parents and caregivers have modified the diets of their children age four-to-24 months.
1. Not sponsored or endorsed by the USDA, NAS/IOM

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    Categories: Nutrition

    cdnaudy Submitted by
    Cécile Duprez-Naudy

    Study Shows That Diets of Infants are Improving; Concerns Remain for Toddler and Preschoolers

    18. October 2009 07:00
    Parents and caregivers are hearing and following the feeding guidance for infants, yet continued work needs to be done to help them also build good eating habits for their growing children, suggests data from the Nestlé Feeding Infants and Toddlers Study (FITS) released today at a symposium at the American Dietetic Association’s Food & Nutrition Conference & Expo. The study reveals both progress and areas of concern in the diets of young children in the United States. The data show some positive trends versus 2002 when Gerber Products Company, now part of the Nestlé family, first commissioned the FITS study.  Infants are being breastfed longer; and fewer infants and toddlers are consuming sweets and sweetened beverages on a given day. However, other findings are less positive—on a given day, many toddlers and preschoolers aren’t eating a single serving of vegetables or fruit; and many toddlers and preschoolers are consuming diets less than the recommended 30-to-40 percent of calories from fat.  Most preschoolers are eating too much saturated fat and sodium. The FITS findings suggest that more guidance and support is needed to help caregivers better transition from feeding their babies to meeting the unique nutrition and feeding needs of a toddler or preschooler. As a result, too many young children are mirroring the often unhealthy eating patterns of American adults. Leveraging science to nourish a healthier generation “Good nutrition from birth through preschool sets the foundation for healthy habits later in life,” said Dr. Kathleen Reidy, Head, Nutrition Science, Meals & Drinks, Nestlé Nutrition. “The Nestlé FITS data provide a rich source of information and we’ll continue to analyze the data for new insights, sharing and applying our findings to advance the quality of children’s diets.” Nestlé FITS is a dietary intake survey of a large, cross-sectional sample of parents and caregivers that provides a snapshot of the eating patterns and nutrient intakes on a given day of infants, toddlers, and preschoolers living in the United States. Data were collected for a sample of 3,378 children age zero-to-four years and provided important information on what foods are eaten at various different stages of development as children transition from an all milk diet onto the foods of the family. Nestlé FITS 2008 is an updated and expanded survey from FITS 2002 that provided dietary data on a sample of 3,000 infants and toddlers age four-to–24 months. The 2008 study offers a comparison to 2002 for those children age four-to-24 months, and provides new data and insight into the eating patterns and nutrient intakes of children age zero-to-three months and preschoolers. Mathematica Policy Research, a nonpartisan research firm, conducted the study on behalf of Nestlé. Mathematica also conducted the FITS 2002 study. “Parents and caregivers need support and education around the unique nutrition needs of young children,” said Dr. Nancy Butte, PhD. Professor, USDA/ARS Children's Nutrition Research Center, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine. “The 2008 FITS data shows us that more feeding guidance is needed during the transition to table foods. We are seeing eating patterns in toddlers and preschoolers that mirror those of adults—24 percent of children ages two-to-five are overweight or obese in the United States. We need to put more focus on establishing healthy eating patterns during the first four years.”

    2008 Nestlé FITS Study Highlights

    • Fewer infants are consuming sweets or sweetened beverages. Seventeen percent of infants age six-to-eight months, consumed a dessert, sweet or sweetened beverage on a given day versus 36 percent in 2002. A similar change was seen for children age    nine-to-11 months old, with 43 percent in 2008 versus 59 percent in 2002 consuming any dessert, sweet or sweetened beverage.
    • Fruit and vegetable consumption remains a problem for all age groups studied. About 25 percent of older infants, toddlers and preschoolers don’t eat a single serving of fruit on a given day, and 30 percent don’t eat a single serving of vegetables. These findings are similar to those in FITS 2002 for infants and toddlers.
    • Fewer toddlers were consuming sweetened beverages in 2008 than in 2002. This was especially true among children age 12-to-14 months (14 percent drank a sweetened beverage on a given day in 2008 versus 29 percent in 2002) and children18-to-20 months (29 percent in 2008 versus 47 percent in 2002).
    • On a given day 23 percent of toddlers 12-to-24 months and one third of preschoolers are consuming diets of less than the recommended 30-to-40 percent of calories from fat.            Yet, 75 percent of preschoolers are consuming too much saturated fat.
    • Mothers are breastfeeding their children longer. In 2008, 33 percent of nine-to-11 month olds are still receiving breast milk compared to just 21 percent in 2002.
    Other survey findings
    • French fries are still the most popular vegetable among toddlers and preschoolers. However, among older babies there were improvements, and French fries are no longer ranked in the top five vegetables among infants age nine-to-11 months, compared to FITS 2002, when French fries ranked among the top vegetables in the diets of older infants on a given day.
    • There is a significant reduction in the number of infants, age four-to–11 months, consuming juice on a given day, versus 2002.
    • A small but important number of older infants are not getting enough iron. Twelve percent of children from six-to-11 months of age are not getting enough iron on a given day.
    • Seventy-one percent of toddlers and eighty-four percent of preschoolers consume more sodium than recommended on a given day.
    A dietary snapshot by developmental stage The Nestlé FITS 2008 findings provide insight into the diets of children at key developmental stages—infants, toddlers and preschoolers. The good news is that caregivers are hearing and following the feeding guidance for infants, yet FITS 2008 shows that more progress is needed in the diets of toddlers and preschoolers. Compared to FITS 2002, the number of months children breastfeed is longer, which builds the child’s immunity, aids a growing baby’s brain and eye development, and may help to lower the child’s risk of developing allergies and infections. What’s more, the introduction of juice is being delayed for infants, and fewer are consuming French fries, sweetened beverages and sweets on a given day. While FITS 2008 shows positive trends in the diets of infants, the data reveal that some older infants have low intakes of iron and consumption of iron-fortified infant cereal is being stopped earlier. As infants grow into toddlers, it is clear from the FITS 2008 findings that more nutrition guidance for parents is needed for this important developmental stage. Overall, on a given day, toddlers are meeting most of their nutrient requirements for healthy growth and development, however, FITS data show gaps in the intake of vegetables, fruit, fiber, vitamin E, potassium and total fat. The data reflect promising downward trends among toddlers in the consumption of French fries, sweets and sweetened beverages, but more improvement is needed. FITS 2008 provides a first-of-its-kind nutrition snapshot of preschoolers (children ages 24-to-48 months). The findings show that on a given day, many preschoolers have unhealthy eating patterns reflective of the diets of older children and adults in the United States. In particular, preschoolers are not consuming enough fruits and vegetables, fiber, potassium and vitamin E and are taking in too much saturated fat and sodium. Help for parents: Start Healthy, Stay HealthyTM FITS 2002 was the foundation of the Start Healthy, Stay Healthy™ nutrition system, Nestlé’s patent-pending stage-based nutrition system that combines products, education and services to foster healthy growth and development and the early establishment of healthy eating habits from birth to preschool. Start Healthy, Stay Healthy Milestones Symbols™ direct parents to the information and products tailored to their child’s developmental stage. The insights from FITS, along with dietary recommendations from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), the National Academy of Sciences/Institute of Medicine (NAS/ IOM) and the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) are the foundation of the Start Healthy, Stay Healthy feeding guidelines and resources.1
    1. Not sponsored or endorsed by the USDA, NAS/IOM

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    Categories: Nutrition

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