Food allergen introduction patterns in the first year of life: A US nationwide survey

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Abstract

Background: Prevention guidelines have changed over the past decade and now recommend the earlier introduction of peanut and egg without delaying the introduction of other food allergens. This paper explored caregiver practices regarding the introduction of food allergens during infancy. Methods: A survey was administered (2021) to a US population-based sample of 3062 caregivers (children 7 months – 3.5 years). Demographics and feeding practices were collected. Weighted frequencies and proportions were calculated using the svyr package in R 4.1. Survey-weighted chi-square statistics and covariate-adjusted, survey-weighted logistic regression models were used for statistical inference. Results: Cow's milk, wheat, and soy were the top three allergens introduced. Peanut and egg were introduced by 17.2% and 15.5% of caregivers before 7 months and 58.8% and 66.4% before 1 year, respectively. The age of peanut and egg introduction differed significantly by race/ethnicity (p

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APA

Venter, C., Warren, C., Samady, W., Nimmagadda, S. R., Vincent, E., Zaslavsky, J., … Gupta, R. (2022). Food allergen introduction patterns in the first year of life: A US nationwide survey. Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 33(12). https://doi.org/10.1111/pai.13896

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