Publication:
Acceptability of Amaranth Grain-based Nutritious Complementary Foods with Dagaa Fish (Rastrineobola argentea) and Edible Termites (Macrotermes subhylanus) Compared to Corn Soy Blend Plus among Young Children/Mothers Dyads in Western Kenya

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Total Views 2
total views
Total Downloads 1
total downloads

Date

2012-07

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Funder

Danish international development assistance

Publisher

Canadian center of science and education

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Cite this Item

O, K. S., N, K. J., O, O. B., M, K. G., A, O. C., B.B, E., Friis, H., Roos, N., & V.O, O. (2012). Acceptability of Amaranth Grain-based Nutritious Complementary Foods with Dagaa Fish (Rastrineobola argentea) and Edible Termites (Macrotermes subhylanus) Compared to Corn Soy Blend Plus among Young Children/Mothers Dyads in Western Kenya. Canadian Center of Science and Education. https://repository.nrf.go.ke/handle/123456789/1315

Abstract

Abstract We assessed acceptability of two flours and porridges of complementary foods based on germinated grain amaranth and maize with or without edible termites and dagaa small fish named “Winfood Classic” (WFC) and “Winfood Lite” (WFL), respectively, compared to Corn Soy Blend Plus (CSB+) among mothers and young children. A total of 57 children consumed each of the three foods on separate days with one-day washout between foods. Each food was considered acceptable if the child consumed at least 75% of the serving. Most mothers preferred WFL flour and porridge (63.2% and 70.2%, respectively) compared to WFC (24.4% and 10.5%) and CSB+ (12.3% and 19.3%). Children consuming at least 75% of served porridge were 43%, 19.6% and 21% for WFL, WFC and CSB+, respectively. No adverse effects were observed for all the foods throughout the study period and follow up lasting 4 weeks. All foods were acceptable and can be further developed and be tested for efficacy.

Description

Abstract

Keywords

complementary food, amaranth grain, Dagaa fish, termites, acceptability, CSB+

Collections

Usage Statistics