Brown and Lee, 2011 [30] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Online questionnaire (self- reported) |
N = 655 mothers |
6–12 months |
BLW vs traditional spoon-feeding |
BLW = 10% or less of puréed foods and spoon-feeding (self-reported) |
/ |
Demographic background of mothers, timing and type of weaning, experiences of introducing solid foods to infants. |
Brown and Lee, 2011 [11] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Child Feeding Questionnaire (self-reported) |
N = 702 mothers |
6–12 months |
BLW vs traditional spoon-feeding |
BLW = using both spoon feeding and purées 10% or less (self-reported) |
/ |
Weaning approach, Information regarding infant weight, perceived size and mothers’ level of control. |
Townsend and Pitchford, 2012 [24] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional on current and retrospective data) |
Self-completed questionnaire |
N = 155 parents |
20–78 months |
baby-led weaning vs traditional spoon feeding |
Self-reported weaning style |
/ |
Impact of the weaning methods on food preferences and health-related outcomes (BMI) |
Cameron et al., 2013 [25] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Online survey |
N = 199 mothers |
6–7 months |
BLW vs traditional spoon-feeding |
adherent BLW = infant mostly or entirely self-feeding; self-identified BLW = mothers reporting following BLW but using at least 50% spoon-feeding;parent-led feeding= > 50% spoon-feeding |
/ |
Comparison between the different feeding practices and selected health-related behaviours (timing and type of complementary food, mealtimes, choking, demographic information) |
Moore et al., 2014 [38] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Parental online questionnaire |
N = 3207 parents |
17–26 weeks |
All |
Self-defined |
/ |
Factors associated with timing of weaning |
Brown and Lee, 2013 [12] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
self-report questionnaire |
N = 298 mothers |
18–24 months |
BLW vs traditional approach |
BLW = 10% or less of puréed foods and spoon-feeding |
/ |
Maternal demographic information, child eating style (satiety-responsiveness, food-responsiveness, fussiness, enjoyment of food) and reported child weight and BMI. |
Brown, 2016 [40] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Maternal self-reported questionnaire, including Dutch Eating Behaviour Questionnaire, Brief Symptom Inventory and Ten Item Personality Questionnaire |
N = 604 mothers |
6–12 months |
BLW vs traditional approach |
BLW = 10% or less of puréed foods and spoon-feeding |
/ |
Maternal characteristics and demographic background, weaning style, maternal personality and eating behavior |
Brown, 2017 [26] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Maternal self-reported questionnaire |
N = 1151 mothers |
4–12 months |
BLW (strict or loose) vs traditional approach |
Self-reported strict or loose BLW or traditional approach; estimated frequency of spoon-feeding (0, 10, 50, 75, 90, 100%) |
/ |
Comparison of number of choking episodes, type of foods offered- > No significant differences in choking episodes between groups |
Cameron et al., 2015 [29] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
weekly interview for 12 weeks and three-day weighed record or iron questionnaires |
N = 23 infants(14 BLISS, 9 BLW) |
6 months (followed until 9 months) |
BLW and BLISS (Baby-Led Introduction to SolidS) |
Self-defined BLW or BLISS approach |
BLW group: no intervention (no feeding protocol to follow). BLISS group: 2 visits and support about the characteristics of BLISS approach. |
Comparison of high energy foods, iron containing foods, high choking risk foods offered. - > the BLISS group was more likely to introduce iron containing foods and less likely to be offered high-choking-risk foods |
Morison et al., 2016 [31] |
Observational (comparative cross-sectional) |
Parental feeding questionnaire and weighed diet record |
N = 51 infants (25 BLW, 26 traditional spoon-feeding TSF) |
6–8 months |
Baby-led vs traditional spoon-feeding |
Self-defined BLW or traditional approach |
/ |
Comparison of food, nutrient and family meal intakes.- > BLW and TSF infants had similar energy intakes; BLW had higher intakes of fat and saturated fat, and lower intakes of iron, zinc and vitamin B12. Many in of both groups were offered high choking risk foods. |
Fangupo et al., 2016 [27] |
RCT |
Maternal report in 5 questionnaires, 2 daily calendars and 2 weighed diet records |
N = 206 healthy women in late pregnancy |
Newborn (followed until 12 months) |
BLISS vs traditional spoon-feeding |
Randomisation to either BLISS or control |
Control group: free well child health care, conventional complementary feeding methods. BLISS group: 8 additional parent contacts for education and support regarding the BLISS approach to complementary feeding. |
Comparison of choking and gagging- no significant group differences in n° of choking events at any time (BLISS infants gagged more frequently at 6 months but less frequently at 8 months than controls)- 35% of infants choked at least once between 6 and 8 months of age - > a large n° of children in both groups was offered foods that pose a choking risk |
Taylor et al., 2017 [32] |
RCT |
Questionnaires and 3-day weighed diet records |
N = 206 healthy women in late pregnancy(105 BLISS, 101control) At 24 months, N = 166 |
Newborn (followed until 24 months) |
BLISS vs traditional spoon-feeding |
Randomisation to either BLISS or control |
Control group: free well child health care, conventional complementary feeding methods. BLISS group: 8 additional parent contacts for education and support regarding the BLISS approach to complementary feeding. |
Primary outcome: BMI z-score at 12 and 24 months. Secondary outcomes: -energy self-regulation and eating behaviors at 6,12,24 months-energy intake at 7,12, 24 months - ≥ mean BMI z-score was not significantly different at 12 months or at 24 months- > in BLISS infants, less food fussiness and greater enjoyment of food reported at 12 months; lower satiety responsiveness at 24 months. - > no significant differences in energy intake at any point |