| Literature DB >> 32414404 |
Joseph Rujumba1, Grace Ndeezi2, Victoria Nankabirwa3, Mary Kwagala2, Michelle Mukochi2, Abdoulaye Hama Diallo4,5, Nicolas Meda5, Ingunn M S Engebretsen6, Thorkild Tylleskär6, James Tumwine2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early initiation and exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months reduces infant morbidity and mortality and can positively impact on cognitive function. In Uganda, exclusive breastfeeding for 6 months is recommended but many women introduce alternative feeds early. Interventions to scale-up peer support provision for exclusive breastfeeding are limited. We explored the barriers, facilitators and solutions to scaling-up of peer counselling support for exclusive breastfeeding in Uganda.Entities:
Keywords: Exclusive breastfeeding; Peer counselling; Support
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32414404 PMCID: PMC7229593 DOI: 10.1186/s13006-020-00287-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Breastfeed J ISSN: 1746-4358 Impact factor: 3.461
Characteristics of study participants
| Category of participants | Number of FGDs & KIIs | Study participants by gender |
|---|---|---|
| Peer counsellors | 1 | 7 female |
| VHT | 1 | 6 (3 female and 3 male) |
| Young mothers (18–24 years) | 2 | 13 female |
| Older mothers (30–40 years) | 2 | 17 female |
| Fathers (32–50 years) | 1 | 7 male |
| Community leaders | 2 | 1 female & 1 male |
| District Health Team | 2 | 1 female & 1 male |
| Non-Government Organizations | 1 | 1 male |
| Faith based organization | 1 | 1 female |
| Ministry of Health | 1 | 1female |
| Mulago Hospital | 1 | 1female |
| Non-Government Organizations | 4 | 2 female & 2 male |
| Professional association | 1 | 1 female |
FGD Focus group discussion, KII Key informant interview
Emerging themes on barriers to scale-up of peer counselling support for exclusive breastfeeding in Uganda
| Organizing theme | Sub-theme |
|---|---|
| Limited resources and high community expectations | - Mobilization and support of peer counsellors - Motivation of peer counsellors - High community expectations |
| HIV related challenges | - Stigma and non-disclosure of HIV status - Confusing messages on HIV transmission through breastfeeding |
| Health facility challenges | - Few health workers - Lack of appropriate IEC materials on EBF promotion - Negative attitude of some health workers |
| Cultural beliefs and practices | - Breast milk is not enough especially for the boy child - Giving complimentary feeds is a norm, highly acceptable and widely practiced - Influence and advice from significant others e.g. mothers and mothers’ in-laws - Expressing breast milk a taboo and can kill |
| Economic barriers | - A belief that EBF only is for the poor who cannot afford supplementary feeds - Lack of food for the mother to produce adequate breast milk - Heavy domestic chores among women |
| Lack of supportive policies and programmes | - Work places not suitable for breastfeeding (lack space and short leave) |
| Low male involvement for maternal health | - Men do not attend antenatal clinics - Men are not informed and unsupportive of EBF |
Thematic presentation of facilitators and solutions to scale-up peer counselling support for exclusive breastfeeding in Uganda
| Structure | Solution |
|---|---|
| Health facilities | - Integrate breastfeeding messages in health education, antenatal, maternity, postnatal and outreach services - Train and supervise peer counsellors |
| Village heath teams | - Ministry of Health Structure, available in most districts - Already involved in maternal and child health |
| The media (radio and newspapers) | - Dissemination of information on breastfeeding - Opportunity to correct misconceptions |
| Role models | - Use of influential and respected community members to promote EBF |
| Existing peer counsellors in Mbale | - Knowledgeable and can provide opportunity for learning |
| Community and faith-based groups | - Breastfeeding promotion in existing membership of women/mothers - Widespread and trusted |
| Professional associations | - Uganda Paediatric Association, Nurses and Midwives Association with country-wide reach - Technical expertise spread throughout the country |