Reuben Foster Twintoh1, Prince Justin Anku2, Hubert Amu3, Eugene Kofour Maafo Darteh1, Kwaku Kissah Korsah1. 1. Department of Population and Health, College of Humanities and Legal Studies, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana. 2. Department of Population and Health, College of Humanities and Legal Studies, University of Cape Coast, Cape Coast, Ghana. prince-justin.anku@ucc.edu.gh. 3. Department of Population and Behavioural Sciences, School of Public Health, University of Health and Allied Sciences, Hohoe, Ghana.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While appropriate care for children is essential for optimal growth and protection against child morbidity and mortality, teenage mothers have been shown to deviate from the recommended childcare practices. This study explored the childcare practices among teenage mothers in Ghana using Ecological Systems Theory by Bronfenbrenner as a theoretical framework. METHODS: Employing qualitative approach to inquiry, evidence was drawn from 30 teenage mothers using in-depth interviews. The data were analysed and presented following systematic qualitative-oriented text analysis strategy with verbatim quotes from study participants to support the emergent themes. RESULTS: It was evident that teenage mothers have limited skills in childcare practices and often resorted to practices with potentially adverse health outcomes for their children. They, for instance, applied hot towels they had heated with hot stones to the children's umbilical stump. We found that teenage mothers were not in sync with their macro- and exo-systems, thereby depriving themselves and their babies of the much-needed guidance and support in caring for their babies. Teenage mothers were often confused and sometimes clueless about best childcare practices at a given point in time. CONCLUSIONS: Childcare practices by teenage mothers are far from the ideal. To improve on child health (especially children born to teenage mothers), efforts at both the macro- and exo-systems should be directed at exposing teenage mothers to best child care practices that inure to the benefits of their children. Ante- and postnatal visits should be used to provide specific education for mothers, especially first-time teenage mothers on the care needs of babies and how to provide these needs.
BACKGROUND: While appropriate care for children is essential for optimal growth and protection against child morbidity and mortality, teenage mothers have been shown to deviate from the recommended childcare practices. This study explored the childcare practices among teenage mothers in Ghana using Ecological Systems Theory by Bronfenbrenner as a theoretical framework. METHODS: Employing qualitative approach to inquiry, evidence was drawn from 30 teenage mothers using in-depth interviews. The data were analysed and presented following systematic qualitative-oriented text analysis strategy with verbatim quotes from study participants to support the emergent themes. RESULTS: It was evident that teenage mothers have limited skills in childcare practices and often resorted to practices with potentially adverse health outcomes for their children. They, for instance, applied hot towels they had heated with hot stones to the children's umbilical stump. We found that teenage mothers were not in sync with their macro- and exo-systems, thereby depriving themselves and their babies of the much-needed guidance and support in caring for their babies. Teenage mothers were often confused and sometimes clueless about best childcare practices at a given point in time. CONCLUSIONS: Childcare practices by teenage mothers are far from the ideal. To improve on child health (especially children born to teenage mothers), efforts at both the macro- and exo-systems should be directed at exposing teenage mothers to best child care practices that inure to the benefits of their children. Ante- and postnatal visits should be used to provide specific education for mothers, especially first-time teenage mothers on the care needs of babies and how to provide these needs.
Entities:
Keywords:
Childcare practices; Ecological systems theory (EST); Ghana; Lived experiences; Teenage mothers
Authors: Bright Opoku Ahinkorah; John Elvis Hagan; Abdul-Aziz Seidu; Joseph Kwame Mintah; Francis Sambah; Thomas Schack; Thomas Hormenu Journal: Front Public Health Date: 2019-04-24
Authors: Agnes M Kotoh; Bernice Sena Amekudzie; Kwabena Opoku-Mensah; Elizabeth Aku Baku; Franklin N Glozah Journal: BMC Public Health Date: 2022-05-05 Impact factor: 4.135