Household production and energy content of infant flours for children aged 6 to 11 months in two rural settings in southern Benin
Background: Homemade complementary foods which are prepared from staples by the mothers or caregivers are mostly used in Africa including Benin. These foods are not adequately enriched and hygienic conditions are sometimes poor. Aims: The aim was to describe household production methods of infant flours and to estimate their macronutrient content in Benin. Methods: From August to October 2020, 20 mothers of children aged 6 to 11 months were selected in the municipalities of Covè and Djakotomey to examine the process of domestic production of infant flours and porridges. Data were collected using a touch screen questionnaire and the energy content of the flours produced by the mothers was calculated and evaluated using the FAO/INFOODS food composition table for West Africa. Results: The main process units for the production of the infant flours were milling:100%, sorting: cereals 60% and legumes: 33%, roasting: cereals 70%, and legumes: 91.7%. Mothers had poor hygienic practices regarding Material: 20%, Manipulator: 20%, and Milieu: 35% during the preparation of infant porridges. Four of the 20 formulas produced had an acceptable energy content, two had a standard fat content (10 - 25 g/100 g flour) and 12 had a standard protein content (15 g/100 g flour). Conclusions: This study showed that the main production methods of infant flours need to be improved. More, the overall energy content from these flours was lower than the recommended macronutrients contents by the standard FAO/WHO/UNICEF and the standards references. It is therefore important to maintain and strengthen nutritional interventions in order to improve the nutritional quality of homemade infant flours.
Keywords
How to Cite
Similar Articles
- Influence of electronic media on food choices of schoolchildren and adolescents in Luanda, Angola
- Editorial from the new Editor-in-Chief and the new Executive Deputy Editors-in-Chief
- Sports supplements: use, knowledge, and risks for Algerian athletes
- Enhancing Freshwater Fish Consumption in Algeria: A Study on the Nutritional and Sensory Attributes of Common Carp Sticks
- Update of the nutritional situation in the Republic of the Sudan
- Investigating bacterial gastroenteritis prevalence in the population of Tizi-Ouzou city under the context of social distancing and barrier measures
- Determination of nutrient composition of some selected traditional home- made meals commonly consumed in Syria
- Study pattern of nutritional recovery in edematous and non-edematous malnourished children after a short hospital stay of nutrition rehabilitation
- Association between 24-hour urinary sodium and iodine in a Beninese population
- Association between meal skipping and the double burden of malnutrition among university students
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

NAJFNR is licensed under