What are the beliefs of pediatricians and dietitians regarding complementary food introduction to prevent allergy?
Abstract
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND
The timing of complementary food introduction is controversial. Providing information on the timing of dietary introduction
is crucial to the primary prevention of food allergy. The American Academy of Pediatrics offers dietary recommendations that
were updated in 2008.
OBJECTIVE
Identify the recommendations that general pediatricians and registered dietitians provide to parents and delineate any differences
in counselling.
METHODS
A 9-item survey was distributed to pediatricians and dietitians online and by mail. Information on practitioner type, gender,
length of practice and specific recommendations regarding complementary food introduction and exposure was collected.
RESULTS
181 surveys were returned with a 54% response rate from pediatricians. It was not possible to calculate a meaningful dietitian
response rate due to overlapping email databases. 52.5% of all respondents were pediatricians and 45.9% were dietitians. The
majority of pediatricians and dietitians advise mothers that peanut abstinence during pregnancy and lactation is unnecessary.
Dietitians were more likely to counsel mothers to breastfeed their infants to prevent development of atopic dermatitis than
pediatricians. Hydrolyzed formulas for infants at risk of developing allergy were the top choice of formula amongst both practitioners.
For food allergy prevention, pediatricians were more likely to recommend delayed introduction of peanut and egg, while most
dietitians recommended no delay in allergenic food introduction.
CONCLUSIONS
In the prophylaxis of food allergy, pediatricians are less aware than dietitians of the current recommendation that there
is no benefit in delaying allergenic food introduction beyond 4 to 6 months. More dietitians than pediatricians believe that
breastfeeding decreases the risk of atopic dermatitis. Practitioners may benefit from increased awareness of current guidelines.
Links
Authors
Institution
BC Children's Hospital, Department of Pediatrics, Division of Allergy, Room 1C31B - 4480 Oak Street, Vancouver, BC V6H 3 V4, Canada. sleo@cw.bc.ca.
Source
Allergy, asthma, and clinical immunology : official journal of the Canadian Society of Allergy and Clinical Immunology 8: 2012 pg 3Pub Type(s)
Journal ArticleLanguage
eng
PubMed ID
22436326
Log In

