Th. Tulchinsky et al., GROWTH AND NUTRITION PATTERNS OF INFANTS ASSOCIATED WITH A NUTRITION EDUCATION AND SUPPLEMENTATION PROGRAM IN GAZA, 1987-92, Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 72(6), 1994, pp. 869-875
Since 1986, the 28 government community health centres providing prima
ry care in Gaza have paid special attention to growth monitoring, nutr
ition education, and routine vitamin and iron supplementation in infan
cy. In 1987-88, 1989 and 1992, respectively, the nursing staff in five
of these centres monitored the growth and feeding patterns of 2222, 1
899, and 1012 children aged up to 15 months. The growth measures of ch
ildren aged up to 6 months were similar to standard growth charts, but
subsequently deficiencies developed in the study children. There were
no differences between the patterns for males and females. Infants fr
om upper socioeconomic categories had growth patterns that were closes
t to the norm, but this was associated with feeding and supplementatio
n differences. There was improvement in the growth and feeding pattern
s of the 1989 and 1990-92 birth cohorts compared with the 1987-88 grou
p and with the standard. Feeding patterns showed high levels of compli
ance with nutrition guidance. Growth monitoring, staff and maternal ed
ucation, and supplementation with vitamins and, especially, iron were
associated with marked improvements in feeding patterns and the growth
status of children aged 3-15 months.