| For Immediate Release
April 6, 2006 |
Contact: Marisa Salcines
Robert Rankin
(404) 252-3663 |
| Download Press Release: MS Word | Adobe PDF |
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KEY NUTRIENTS CRUCIAL FOR OLDER INFANTS’ DEVELOPMENT
CONFERENCE AT EXPERIMENTAL BIOLOGY EXPLORES ADVANCES IN INFANT FEEDING OVER PAST 25 YEARS
SAN FRANCISCO (April 6, 2006) – According to Nancy Krebs, M.D., a professor of Pediatrics at the University of
Colorado Health Sciences Center and former Chair of the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) Committee on
Nutrition, it can be difficult to meet the nutritional needs of older infants. Since human milk alone is no longer adequate
to meet infant nutritional requirements after 6 months of age, the importance of complementary foods was stressed. In
older infants, Krebs showed that meat could be a critical complementary food for providing recommended zinc and iron
levels.
John L. Beard, Ph.D., a professor of Nutritional Sciences at Pennsylvania State University, stressed iron is critical in
the developing nervous system. “All data to date, in three species, suggest a critical period exists in early life that
requires the adequate delivery of iron to the brain,” he said.
Krebs and Beard, along with other international and U.S. speakers presented yesterday to nutrition scientists at the
Experimental Biology* meeting this past Wednesday. The special session, Advances in Meeting the Nutritional Needs
of Infants Worldwide, highlighted achievements and challenges in infant nutrition and health outcomes over the past
quarter-century, stressed the importance of breastfeeding infants in the first six months of life and also provided an
overview of opportunities for further research and progress.
Kim F. Michaelsen, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of Human Nutrition at the Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University in
Denmark described improved breastfeeding rates over the past 25 years as well as the benefits of human milk. In a
new analysis of United States Agency for International Development data from 20 developing countries, Bernadette M.
Marriott, Ph.D., from RTI International, confirmed the high prevalence of breastfeeding throughout the first year of life
yet also noted the common use of water, sweetened beverages, and solid foods as well as the less common use of
animal milks and infant formulas over this same period in these countries.
As noted by the AAP in its 2005 Policy Statement Breastfeeding and the Use of Human Milk, “Infants weaned before
12 months of age should not receive cow's milk but should receive iron-fortified infant formula." Conference
participants, moderated by William C. Heird, M.D., professor of Pediatrics, Children’s Nutrition Research Center at
Baylor College of Medicine, underscored the importance of nutrition throughout infancy, particularly the need to
improve the nutritional quality of complementary foods in older infants’ diets. In that respect, Dr. Heird noted the
progress made in infant formulas with the addition of important nutrients like taurine, carnitine, nucleotides, and longchain
polyunsaturated fatty acids over the past 25 years.
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*IFC is an international association of manufacturers and marketers of formulated
nutrition products (e.g., infant formulas and adult nutritionals) whose members
are predominantly based in North America. IFC members include all major U.S. manufacturers:
Mead Johnson Nutritionals; Nestle USA, Inc., Nutrition Division; Ross Products
Division, Abbott Laboratories; Solus Products; and Wyeth Nutrition.
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