Interview Data for The Feeding Infants Study, 2020

Isaacs, Anna (2022). Interview Data for The Feeding Infants Study, 2020. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-855491

Introduction: Considerable evidence underscores the importance of establishing healthy feeding practices early to protect against obesity and related chronic diseases later in life. Given this, it is critical to understand what influences caregivers’ decisions about what to feed their children in the period where infants are transitioning from breast milk or infant formula to solid food. There is currently limited research that considers, in-depth, and over time the transition from breast milk or infant formula to solid food. This is important, since contextual factors have been shown to be as if not more important than nutritional ideals in shaping feeding practices. Methods: In order to understand the experience of infant feeding transitions, we engaged 62 parents of infants in England in this remote, longitudinal qualitative study. During phase one of the study, infants were aged from 4-6 months and thus were just on the cusp of starting solid foods. Subsequent data collection will take place when the infants are 10-12 months old and 16-18 months old. To explore how socioeconomic position might influence infant feeding practices, we recruited an equal number of participants of high, middle, and low SEP. Methods, which comprised in-depth interviews and photo elicitation, were designed to gather information on a) parents experiences of feeding their infants over the first year of weaning b) how these experiences are shaped by individual, social, cultural, and economic factors.

Data description (abstract)

Considerable evidence underscores the importance of establishing healthy feeding practices early to protect against obesity and related chronic diseases later in life. Given this, it is critical to understand what influences caregivers’ decisions about what to feed their children in the period where infants are transitioning from breast milk or infant formula to solid food. There is currently limited research that considers, in-depth, and over time the transition from breast milk or infant formula to solid food. This is important, since contextual factors have been shown to be as if not more important than nutritional ideals in shaping feeding practices. In order to understand the experience of infant feeding transitions, we engaged 62 parents of infants in England in this remote, longitudinal qualitative study. During phase one of the study, infants were aged from 4-6 months and thus were just on the cusp of starting solid foods. Subsequent data collection will take place when the infants are 10-12 months old and 16-18 months old. To explore how socioeconomic position might influence infant feeding practices, we recruited an equal number of participants of high, middle, and low SEP. Methods, which comprised in-depth interviews and photo elicitation, were designed to gather information on a) parents experiences of feeding their infants over the first year of weaning b) how these experiences are shaped by individual, social, cultural, and economic factors. This data is interview data from phase 1 of the study.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
Isaacs Anna City, University of London http://orcid.org/ 0000-0001-5135-232X
Sponsors: National Institute for Health Research Policy Research Programme
Grant reference: PRU-0916-21001
Topic classification: Social welfare policy and systems
Health
Keywords: FOOD AND NUTRITION, PUBLIC HEALTH, PARENTS, INFANT FEEDING
Project title: What policy options will be effective in encouraging healthy feeding practices among infants and young children?
Grant holders: Professor Corinna Hawkes
Project dates:
FromTo
1 March 202031 December 2021
Date published: 22 Mar 2022 16:18
Last modified: 22 Mar 2022 16:18

Available Files

Data

Documentation

Downloads

data downloads and page views since this item was published

View more statistics

Altmetric

Website

Edit item (login required)

Edit Item Edit Item