| Literature DB >> 19422709 |
Lars T Fadnes1, Ingunn M S Engebretsen, Henry Wamani, Nulu B Semiyaga, Thorkild Tylleskär, James K Tumwine.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Infant feeding recommendations for HIV-positive mothers differ from recommendations to mothers of unknown HIV-status. The aim of this study was to compare feeding practices, including breastfeeding, between infants and young children of HIV-positive mothers and infants of mothers in the general population of Uganda.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19422709 PMCID: PMC2687447 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-9-124
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Study enrolment overview.
Baseline characteristics for HIV-positive mothers and mothers from the general population
| Girl | 109 (46) | 346 (48) | |
| Boy | 126 (54) | 381 (52) | |
| < 6 months | 37 (16) | 415 (57) | |
| 6 – 11 months | 53 (23) | 312 (43) | |
| 12 – 17 months | 64 (27) | ||
| 18 – 23 months | 81 (34) | ||
| None | 27 (11) | 59 (8) | |
| Stopped in primary | 125 (53) | 301 (41) | |
| Completed primary (7 years) | 39 (17) | 139 (19) | |
| Secondary education | 37 (16) | 183 (25) | |
| Higher education (12 years and above) | 7 (3) | 45 (6) | |
| None | 14 (6) | 40 (6) | |
| Stopped in primary | 72 (32) | 161 (26) | |
| Completed primary (7 years) | 62 (27) | 154 (25) | |
| Secondary education | 50 (22) | 177 (29) | |
| Higher education (12 years and above) | 30 (13) | 83 (14) | |
| Yes | 201 (86) | 507 (70) | |
| No | 34 (14) | 218 (30) | |
| Married or cohabiting | 91 (39) | 667 (92) | |
| Widowed | 112 (48) | 6 (1) | |
| Separated or divorced | 28 (12) | 13 (2) | |
| Single | 4 (2) | 41 (6) | |
| Yes | 162 (69) | 561 (78) | |
| No | 73 (31) | 154 (22) | |
| Rural | 205 (87) | 401 (55) | |
| Urban | 30 (13) | 326 (45) | |
| Poorest quintile | 65 (28) | 122 (17) | |
| 2nd quintile | 49 (21) | 141 (20) | |
| 3rd quintile | 52 (22) | 143 (20) | |
| 4th quintile | 38 (16) | 148 (21) | |
| Least poor quintile | 30 (13) | 159 (22) | |
| ≤ 19 | 2 (1) | 129 (18) | |
| 20 – 24 | 20 (9) | 247 (34) | |
| 25 – 29 | 61 (26) | 146 (20) | |
| 30 – 34 | 85 (36) | 134 (19) | |
| ≥ 35 | 67 (29) | 64 (9) | |
| None | 12 (5) | 175 (24) | |
| 1 | 41 (17) | 148 (20) | |
| 2–3 | 82 (35) | 196 (27) | |
| ≥ 4 | 100 (43) | 205 (28) | |
| 0 – 2 | 43 (18) | 155 (21) | |
| 2 – 4 | 68 (29) | 343 (47) | |
| 4 – 6 | 67 (29) | 142 (20) | |
| ≥ 6 | 57 (24) | 86 (12) |
Figure 2Initial feeding practices during the first 3 days comparing HIV-positive mothers diagnosed before and after birth and mothers from the general population. 1 Exclusive replacement feeding significantly different between HIV-positive diagnosed before birth and general-population mothers (p < 0.001). 2 Non-water based pre-lacteals were given significantly more often to children of HIV-positive mothers than general-population mothers.
Figure 3Breastfeeding initiation time comparing HIV-positive mothers diagnosed before and after birth and mothers from the general population. 1 Exclusive replacement feeding significantly different between HIV-positive mothers acquiring HIV prior to birth and general-population mothers (p < 0.001).
Feeding patterns during the first 3 days among HIV-positive mothers compared to mothers from the general population
| Girl | 68 (62) | 31 (28) | 10 (9) | 200 (58) | 146 (42) |
| Boy | 82 (65) | 34 (27) | 10 (8) | 214 (66) | 166 (44) |
| * | |||||
| None | 14 (52) | 13 (48) | 0 (0) | 36 (61) | 23 (39) |
| Stopped in primary | 87 (70) | 31 (25) | 7 (6) | 187 (62) | 114 (38) |
| Completed primary (7 years) | 25 (64) | 8 (21) | 6 (15) | 84 (60) | 54 (39) |
| Secondary education | 21 (57) | 10 (27) | 6 (16) | 86 (47) | 97 (53) |
| Higher education (12 years and above) | 3 (43) | 3 (43) | 1 (14) | 21 (47) | 24 (53) |
| None | 8 (57) | 6 (43) | 0 (0) | 27 (68) | 13 (32) |
| Stopped in primary | 44 (61) | 25 (35) | 3 (4) | 112 (70) | 48 (30) |
| Completed primary (7 years) | 43 (69) | 13 (21) | 6 (10) | 94 (61) | 60 (39) |
| Secondary education | 31 (62) | 14 (28) | 5 (10) | 89 (50) | 88 (50) |
| Higher education (12 years and above) | 19 (63) | 7 (23) | 4 (13) | 33 (40) | 50 (60) |
| Yes | 131 (65) | 56 (28) | 14 (7) | 308 (61) | 199 (39) |
| No | 19 (56) | 9 (26) | 6 (18) | 105 (48) | 112 (51) |
| Married or cohabiting | 61 (67) | 23 (25) | 7 (8) | 379 (57) | 287 (43) |
| Widowed | 71 (63) | 32 (29) | 9 (8) | 4 (67) | 2 (33) |
| Separated or divorced | 16 (57) | 9 (32) | 3 (11) | 10 (77) | 3 (23) |
| Single | 2 (50) | 1 (25) | 1 (25) | 21 (51) | 20 (49) |
| Yes | 100 (62) | 51 (31) | 11 (7) | 331 (59) | 229 (41) |
| No | 50 (69) | 14 (19) | 9 (12) | 77 (50) | 77 (50) |
| Rural | 132 (64) | 57 (28) | 16 (8) | 239 (60) | 162 (40) |
| Urban | 18 (60) | 8 (27) | 4 (13) | 175 (54) | 150 (46) |
| Bottom quintile | 39 (60) | 23 (35) | 3 (5) | 74 (61) | 48 (39) |
| 2nd quintile | 39 (80) | 8 (16) | 2 (4) | 92 (65) | 49 (35) |
| 3rd quintile | 33 (63) | 16 (31) | 3 (6) | 80 (56) | 63 (44) |
| 4th quintile | 22 (58) | 10 (26) | 6 (16) | 84 (57) | 64 (43) |
| Top quintile | 17 (57) | 7 (23) | 6 (20) | 76 (48) | 82 (52) |
| ≤ 19 | 2 (100) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 76 (59) | 53 (41) |
| 20 – 24 | 13 (65) | 6 (30) | 1 (5) | 136 (55) | 111 (45) |
| 25 – 29 | 38 (62) | 16 (26) | 7 (11) | 87 (60) | 59 (40) |
| 30 – 34 | 54 (64) | 24 (28) | 7 (8) | 74 (55) | 60 (45) |
| ≥ 35 | 43 (64) | 19 (28) | 5 (7) | 35 (55) | 28 (44) |
| One | 6 (50) | 6 (50) | 0 (0) | 98 (56) | 77 (44) |
| 2 | 24 (59) | 7 (17) | 10 (24) | 79 (53) | 69 (47) |
| 3–4 | 53 (65) | 22 (27) | 7 (9) | 117 (60) | 78 (40) |
| ≥ 5 | 67 (67) | 30 (30) | 3 (3) | 117 (57) | 88 (43) |
| 0 – 2 | 26 (60) | 8 (19) | 9 (21) | 87 (56) | 68 (44) |
| 2 – 4 | 45 (66) | 18 (27) | 5 (7) | 194 (57) | 148 (43) |
| 4 – 6 | 45 (67) | 18 (27) | 4 (6) | 83 (58) | 59 (42) |
| ≥ 6 | 34 (60) | 21 (37) | 2 (4) | 50 (58) | 36 (42) |
| HIV-diagnosis before birth | 93 (62) | 38 (25) | 19 (13) | ||
| HIV-diagnosis after birth | 57 (67) | 27 (32) | 1 (1) | ||
Exclusive replacement feeding column is removed from the general population because it was chosen by only one mother from this group
* Significance level of p < 0.05, ** Significance level of p < 0.01
Figure 4Breastfeeding duration in months (x-axis) stratified for HIV-positive mothers diagnosed before and after delivery and general-population mothers. Proportion still breastfeeding (y-axis) visualised with a Kaplan-Meier-plot.
Figure 5Age-specific infant feeding patterns for infants of HIV-positive mothers and general-population mothers according to 24-hour recall. 1 Infants aged 0–5 months: general-population mothers practised exclusive breastfeeding more frequently than HIV-positive mothers (p < 0.05), while the opposite was seen with replacement feeding (p < 0.001). Among infants aged 6–11 months the difference in frequency was different (p < 0.001).
Nutritional items given to infants of HIV-positive mothers and mothers in the general population using 24-hour recall (age categorised)
| Water | 20 (54) | 94 (23) | |
| Herbal water or gripe water | 5 (17) | 24 (6) | |
| Fruit juice, tea with sugar etc | 10 (27) | 68 (16) | |
| Non-human milks | 20 (54) | 146 (35) | |
| Staple food (maize, beans etc) | 18 (49) | 60 (14) | |
| Meat, egg or fish | 2 (5) | 8 (2) | |
| Number of items given last 24 hours | |||
| None | 9 (24) | 187 (45) | |
| 1 – 2 | 11 (30) | 152 (37) | |
| 3 – 5 | 8 (22) | 63 (15) | |
| 6 – 9 | 5 (14) | 11 (3) | |
| 10 or more | 4 (11) | 1 (0.2) | |
| Water | 43 (84) | 220 (71) | |
| Herbal water or gripe water | 2 (4) | 16 (5) | |
| Fruit juice, tea with sugar etc | 26 (51) | 142 (46) | |
| Non-human milks | 33 (65) | 171 (55) | |
| Staple food (maize, beans etc) | 50 (98) | 252 (81) | |
| Meat, egg or fish | 20 (39) | 55 (18) | |
| Number of items given last 24 hours | |||
| None | 0 (0) | 11 (4) | |
| 1 – 2 | 2 (4) | 75 (24) | |
| 3 – 5 | 19 (37) | 121 (39) | |
| 6 – 9 | 24 (47) | 80 (26) | |
| 10 or more | 6 (12) | 25 (8) |