Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh

This study was part of a longitudinal study on the consequences of low birth weight (LBW) babies which was carried out in three unions of Manikganj district during 1993- 1994. This study aimed to assess the breastfeeding practices among infants and to compare the weaning practices among LBW and n...

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Main Authors: Gazi, Rukhsana, Karim, Fazlul, Ali, Ahmed
Formato: Research report
Idioma:English
Publicado em: BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED) 2020
Assuntos:
Acesso em linha:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13578
id 10361-13578
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-135782020-01-16T21:01:23Z Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh Gazi, Rukhsana Karim, Fazlul Ali, Ahmed Low birth weight (LBW) Breastfeeding Infant feeding Rural Bangladesh Infants--Nutrition Breastfeeding Health, Nutrition, and Population Program (BRAC) This study was part of a longitudinal study on the consequences of low birth weight (LBW) babies which was carried out in three unions of Manikganj district during 1993- 1994. This study aimed to assess the breastfeeding practices among infants and to compare the weaning practices among LBW and normal birth weight infants. A total of 644 infants were registered within 48 hours of birth and they received monthly follow-up visit upto one year of age. Although breastfeeding was universal in the study population, detrimental feeding practices, such as the administration of pre-lacteal foods (75%) and rejection of colostrum (1 1 %) were prevalent among the mothers. There was a delay in initiation of first breastfeeding. Although 77% of the mothers exclusively breastfed their babies at the first month, the prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding decreased to 50% by the third month. The main reason for giving additional foods was that the mothers felt breastmilk was insufficient. A significantly higher proportion of LBW infants received additional feeding than the normal infants. It might be due to the mothers perception that the additional foe<i to thin looking LBW babies was needed for their quick recovery and proper growth. Health workers should receive practical training on breastfeeding counselling. Weekly follow-up and monitoring of breastfeeding practices for at least one month can be introduced in the breastfeeding interventions. Audio-visual aids can be used to teach mothers how to breastfeed effectively. LBW babies require more frequent and short feedings. Expressed breast milk can be fed to LBW babies who can not suck. 2020-01-16T04:39:17Z 2020-01-16T04:39:17Z 1997-08 Research report Gazi, R., Karim, F., & Ali, A. (1997, August). Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh. Research Reports (1997): Health Studies, Vol - XXI, 57–76. http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13578 en application/pdf BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Low birth weight (LBW)
Breastfeeding
Infant feeding
Rural Bangladesh
Infants--Nutrition
Breastfeeding
Health, Nutrition, and Population Program (BRAC)
spellingShingle Low birth weight (LBW)
Breastfeeding
Infant feeding
Rural Bangladesh
Infants--Nutrition
Breastfeeding
Health, Nutrition, and Population Program (BRAC)
Gazi, Rukhsana
Karim, Fazlul
Ali, Ahmed
Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh
description This study was part of a longitudinal study on the consequences of low birth weight (LBW) babies which was carried out in three unions of Manikganj district during 1993- 1994. This study aimed to assess the breastfeeding practices among infants and to compare the weaning practices among LBW and normal birth weight infants. A total of 644 infants were registered within 48 hours of birth and they received monthly follow-up visit upto one year of age. Although breastfeeding was universal in the study population, detrimental feeding practices, such as the administration of pre-lacteal foods (75%) and rejection of colostrum (1 1 %) were prevalent among the mothers. There was a delay in initiation of first breastfeeding. Although 77% of the mothers exclusively breastfed their babies at the first month, the prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding decreased to 50% by the third month. The main reason for giving additional foods was that the mothers felt breastmilk was insufficient. A significantly higher proportion of LBW infants received additional feeding than the normal infants. It might be due to the mothers perception that the additional foe<i to thin looking LBW babies was needed for their quick recovery and proper growth. Health workers should receive practical training on breastfeeding counselling. Weekly follow-up and monitoring of breastfeeding practices for at least one month can be introduced in the breastfeeding interventions. Audio-visual aids can be used to teach mothers how to breastfeed effectively. LBW babies require more frequent and short feedings. Expressed breast milk can be fed to LBW babies who can not suck.
format Research report
author Gazi, Rukhsana
Karim, Fazlul
Ali, Ahmed
author_facet Gazi, Rukhsana
Karim, Fazlul
Ali, Ahmed
author_sort Gazi, Rukhsana
title Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh
title_short Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh
title_full Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh
title_fullStr Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Infant feeding practices in rural Bangladesh
title_sort infant feeding practices in rural bangladesh
publisher BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13578
work_keys_str_mv AT gazirukhsana infantfeedingpracticesinruralbangladesh
AT karimfazlul infantfeedingpracticesinruralbangladesh
AT aliahmed infantfeedingpracticesinruralbangladesh
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