Effect of iron-fortified infant cereal on nutritional status of infants in Ghana

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Abstract

Iron deficiency anemia is prevalent among infants in Ghana. This study evaluated the effect of micronutrient-fortified infant cereal on the nutritional status of infants in the La Nkwantanang Municipality of the Greater Accra Region of Ghana, located in western Africa. In this double-blind, controlled trial, infants aged 6–18 months were cluster-randomized to receive either micronutrient-fortified infant cereal containing 3.75 mg iron as ferrous fumarate/50 g cereal (INT; n = 107) or the same cereal without iron (CTL; n = 101) to complement other foods and breast milk. The intervention phase lasted six months followed by a two-month post–intervention phase (with no further study product feeding). Hemoglobin and anthropometry were assessed every 2 months for the 8-month study period. After the 6-month intervention phase, adjusted mean ± standard error change in hemoglobin from baseline in INT and CTL was 1.97 ± 0.19 and 1.16 ± 0.21 g/dl, respectively (p

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APA

Harrison, O. A., Hays, N. P., Ansong, R. S., Datoghe, D., Vuvor, F., & Steiner-Asiedu, M. (2022). Effect of iron-fortified infant cereal on nutritional status of infants in Ghana. Food Science and Nutrition, 10(1), 286–294. https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.2669

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