Literature DB >> 11358922

Promoting breastfeeding in rural Gambia: combining traditional and modern knowledge.

I J Semega-Janneh1, E Bøhler, H Holm, I Matheson, G Holmboe-Ottesen.   

Abstract

Sub-optimal breastfeeding practices still prevail in many countries, especially in traditional rural communities. Despite high breastfeeding initiation rates and long total duration of breastfeeding, exclusive breastfeeding is a rare practice. In the present study, quantitative methods were used to identify current infant feeding practices in 12 rural communities in The GAMBIA: Results indicated that delayed initiation of breastfeeding, prelacteal feeding and failure to practice exclusive breastfeeding were widespread. Qualitative data further indicated that current beliefs and practices were strongly influenced by traditional beliefs and practices. These were kept very much alive by elders, both women and men, including husbands. The results also showed an unexpected support for bottle-feeding from both male and female elders who considered it part of the modernization process. A strategy for promoting early initiation of breastfeeding, feeding of colostrum and exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months in rural communities should therefore incorporate traditional beliefs and practices into modern messages on optimal breastfeeding. Traditional beliefs and practices in the study setting that could be used in this way included knowledge from the population's acquaintance with the newborns of their livestock. It also included the traditional practice of mothers taking their very young children with them when going to work in the fields. The paper suggests such a strategy by developing a matrix to establish linkages between modern and traditional knowledge on a specific practice. Such linkages facilitate the acceptance of recommendations on infant feeding by mothers in these communities. The strategy recommends an expanded target group to include elders and husbands, as the data show that these groups are highly influential in matters regarding patterns of child feeding.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11358922     DOI: 10.1093/heapol/16.2.199

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Policy Plan        ISSN: 0268-1080            Impact factor:   3.344


  21 in total

1.  Impact of flooding on feeding practices of infants and young children in Dhaka, Bangladesh Slums: what are the coping strategies?

Authors:  Sophie M Goudet; Paula L Griffiths; Barry A Bogin; Nasima Selim
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2011-04       Impact factor: 3.092

2.  Establishing individual peer counselling for exclusive breastfeeding in Uganda: implications for scaling-up.

Authors:  Jolly Nankunda; Thorkild Tylleskär; Grace Ndeezi; Nulu Semiyaga; James K Tumwine
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2010-01       Impact factor: 3.092

3.  Evaluating nurses' implementation of an infant-feeding counseling protocol for HIV-infected mothers: The Ban Study in Lilongwe, Malawi.

Authors:  Yvonne Owens Ferguson; Eugenia Eng; Margaret Bentley; Margarete Sandelowski; Allan Steckler; Elizabeth Randall-David; Ellen G Piwoz; Cynthia Zulu; Charles Chasela; Alice Soko; Martin Tembo; Francis Martinson; Beth Carlton Tohill; Yusuf Ahmed; Peter Kazembe; Denise J Jamieson; Charles van der Horst; Linda Adair; Yusuf Ahmed; Mounir Ait-Khaled; Sandra Albrecht; Shrikant Bangdiwala; Ronald Bayer; Margaret Bentley; Brian Bramson; Emily Bobrow; Nicola Boyle; Sal Butera; Charles Chasela; Charity Chavula; Joseph Chimerang'ambe; Maggie Chigwenembe; Maria Chikasema; Norah Chikhungu; David Chilongozi; Grace Chiudzu; Lenesi Chome; Anne Cole; Amanda Corbett; Amy Corneli; Ann Duerr; Henry Eliya; Sascha Ellington; Joseph Eron; Sherry Farr; Yvonne Owens Ferguson; Susan Fiscus; Shannon Galvin; Laura Guay; Chad Heilig; Irving Hoffman; Elizabeth Hooten; Mina Hosseinipour; Michael Hudgens; Stacy Hurst; Lisa Hyde; Denise Jamieson; George Joaki; David Jones; Zebrone Kacheche; Esmie Kamanga; Gift Kamanga; Coxcilly Kampani; Portia Kamthunzi; Deborah Kamwendo; Cecilia Kanyama; Angela Kashuba; Damson Kathyola; Dumbani Kayira; Peter Kazembe; Rodney Knight; Athena Kourtis; Robert Krysiak; Jacob Kumwenda; Edde Loeliger; Misheck Luhanga; Victor Madhlopa; Maganizo Majawa; Alice Maida; Cheryl Marcus; Francis Martinson; Navdeep Thoofer; Chrissie Matika; Douglas Mayers; Isabel Mayuni; Marita McDonough; Joyce Meme; Ceppie Merry; Khama Mita; Chimwemwe Mkomawanthu; Gertrude Mndala; Ibrahim Mndala; Agnes Moses; Albans Msika; Wezi Msungama; Beatrice Mtimuni; Jane Muita; Noel Mumba; Bonface Musis; Charles Mwansambo; Gerald Mwapasa; Jacqueline Nkhoma; Richard Pendame; Ellen Piwoz; Byron Raines; Zane Ramdas; John Rublein; Mairin Ryan; Ian Sanne; Christopher Sellers; Diane Shugars; Dorothy Sichali; Wendy Snowden; Alice Soko; Allison Spensley; Jean-Marc Steens; Gerald Tegha; Martin Tembo; Roshan Thomas; Hsiao-Chuan Tien; Beth Tohill; Charles van der Horst; Esther Waalberg; Jeffrey Wiener; Cathy Wilfert; Patricia Wiyo; Onnocent Zgambo; Chifundo Zimba
Journal:  AIDS Educ Prev       Date:  2009-04

4.  Perceived incentives and barriers to exclusive breastfeeding among periurban Ghanaian women.

Authors:  Gloria E Otoo; Anna A Lartey; Rafael Pérez-Escamilla
Journal:  J Hum Lact       Date:  2008-10-29       Impact factor: 2.219

5.  Sub-optimal breastfeeding of infants during the first six months and associated factors in rural communities of Jimma Arjo Woreda, Southwest Ethiopia.

Authors:  Dessalegn Tamiru; Tefera Belachew; Eskindir Loha; Shikur Mohammed
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2012-05-18       Impact factor: 3.295

6.  Determinants of breastfeeding initiation among mothers in Kuwait.

Authors:  Manal Dashti; Jane A Scott; Christine A Edwards; Mona Al-Sughayer
Journal:  Int Breastfeed J       Date:  2010-07-28       Impact factor: 3.461

7.  "She would sit with me": mothers' experiences of individual peer support for exclusive breastfeeding in Uganda.

Authors:  Jolly Nankunda; James K Tumwine; Victoria Nankabirwa; Thorkild Tylleskär
Journal:  Int Breastfeed J       Date:  2010-10-26       Impact factor: 3.461

8.  Differences between international recommendations on breastfeeding in the presence of HIV and the attitudes and counselling messages of health workers in Lilongwe, Malawi.

Authors:  Ellen G Piwoz; Yvonne Owens Ferguson; Margaret E Bentley; Amy L Corneli; Agnes Moses; Jacqueline Nkhoma; Beth Carlton Tohill; Beatrice Mtimuni; Yusuf Ahmed; Denise J Jamieson; Charles van der Horst; Peter Kazembe
Journal:  Int Breastfeed J       Date:  2006-03-09       Impact factor: 3.461

9.  Community based peer counsellors for support of exclusive breastfeeding: experiences from rural Uganda.

Authors:  Jolly Nankunda; James K Tumwine; Ashild Soltvedt; Nulu Semiyaga; Grace Ndeezi; Thorkild Tylleskär
Journal:  Int Breastfeed J       Date:  2006-10-20       Impact factor: 3.461

10.  HIV and infant feeding counselling: challenges faced by nurse-counsellors in northern Tanzania.

Authors:  Sebalda C Leshabari; Astrid Blystad; Marina de Paoli; Karen M Moland
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2007-07-24
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