Effect of 12-month intervention with lipid-based nutrient supplement on the physical activity of Malawian toddlers: a randomised, controlled trial

Type Journal Article - British Journal of Nutrition
Title Effect of 12-month intervention with lipid-based nutrient supplement on the physical activity of Malawian toddlers: a randomised, controlled trial
Author(s)
Volume 117
Issue 4
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2017
Page numbers 511-518
URL https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/3E3E2419A775D794D77E61E6DB4F​8D34/S0007114517000290a.pdf/???
Abstract
Physical activity is beneficial for children’s well-being. The effect of dietary supplementation on children’s physical activity in food-insecure
areas remains little studied. We examined the effects of a lipid-based nutrient supplement (LNS) on children’s objectively measured physical
activity in a randomised, controlled, outcome-assessor-blinded trial. Mothers of the children received one capsule daily of Fe-folic acid (IFA),
one capsule containing eighteen micronutrients (MMN) or one 20 g sachet of LNS (containing twenty-two MMN, protein, carbohydrates,
essential fatty acids and 494 kJ (118 kcal)) during pregnancy and for 6 months thereafter. Children in the IFA and MMN groups received no
supplementation, and these groups were collapsed into a single control group; children in the LNS group received 20 g LNS from 6 to
18 months. We measured physical activity with accelerometers over 1 week at 18 months. The main outcome was mean vector magnitude
counts/15 s. Of the 728 children at the beginning of child intervention at 6 months, 570 (78 %) provided sufficient data for analysis. The mean
accelerometer counts for the 190 children in the LNS group and for the 380 children in the control group were 303 (SD 59) and 301 (SD 56),
respectively (Pfor difference=0·65). LNS, given to mothers during pregnancy and 6 months postpartum and to their infants from 6 to 18 months
of age, did not increase physical activity among 18-month-old children.

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