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Title: Nutrition Content of Young Child Formulas. Author: Du N, DiMaggio DM, Porto AF. Journal: J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr; 2023 Apr 01; 76(4):512-516. PubMed ID: 36720107. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: European Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition and the American Academy of Pediatrics state that young child formula (YCF) is not considered necessary for healthy children. Despite these recommendations, YCF accounts for approximately 13% of overall formula sales. Five percent of infants less than 1 year of age in the United States are being fed YCF. The purpose of this study is to identify the most Internet recommended and encountered YCF in the United States and determine if they meet nutritional recommendations for use in children 0-3 years. STUDY DESIGN: We used the search terms "toddler formula," "toddler milk," "follow-up formula," or "young child formula" in Google and DuckDuckGo to identify the most like encountered or recommended YCF on the Internet. We compared their labeled nutrients to Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Infant Formula Act (IFA) and international nutrient recommendations, given the absence of US nutrient requirements for YCF recommendations, for children 12-36 months. RESULTS: Twenty-nine YCF were reviewed. On average, YCF did not meet nutrient recommendations for infants and toddlers with 2.17 and 4.6 ingredients not meeting formula recommendations for younger and older infants, respectively, and between 3 and 4 ingredients for 12-36 months. CONCLUSIONS: Nutrition content of YCF are variable and do not meet FDA IFA requirements or YCF international recommendations. Increased US regulation is needed for YCF. It is important for health care providers to ask patients what they are feeding their infants and toddlers so they can educate parents on potential nutritional safety concerns.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]