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Knowledge And Attitude Of Nursing Mothers On Exclusive Breastfeeding
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INTRODUCTION
Background of Study
Nurses play a major role in the promotion and implementation of Primary Health care (www.paho.org/English/DD/DIN/alma-ata declaration.htm). Since nurses are the bedrock in the delivery of healthcare, they frequently need to be updated with adequate knowledge so that they, in turn, spread adequate information and skills to mothers and the community as a whole. However, the health and nutritional status of children and mothers are intimately linked. This means that mothers and their children form a biological and social unit; the health and nutrition of one cannot be divorced from another. Therefore, children have the right to access safe and nutritious food. These factors are important for achieving full potential growth and development. Women also have the right to adequate food and the right to decide how to feed their children and to have correct information and conditions that will enable them carry their decisions. They also have the right to maternity protection and nutrition (NIYCF, 2006-2010). Breastfeeding provides the healthiest beginning for the infant. With the risk of Mother to Child Transmission of HIV through breast feeding, health workers need guidance on how to address issues of optimal infant feeding on one hand whilst minimizing the risk of MTCT and the risk of infants dying from improper feeding practices on the other hand (NIYCF, 2006-2010). In the recent past with the unfolding detail about HIV/AIDS and MTCT, the need for consistent and clear messages in relation to optimal infant and young child feeding practices has become more apparent. The National Infant Young Child Feeding (NIYCF) operational Strategy builds on the past and continuing achievements in promoting optimal infant and young child feeding.
These include exclusive breast feeding for six months and continued breastfeeding up to 2 years with introduction of appropriate timely complementary feeding, the implementation and monitoring of the International Code of Marketing of breast milk substitutes and the rights of working women to maternity protection. In the past decade, the government has implemented programmes aimed at improving the welfare of infants and young children. The government has 1 also enacted a legislation to reduce the marketing of breast-milk substitutes. Currently, various community-based initiatives (HIV positive living support groups, Home based Care support groups, etc), do not adequately include infant feeding issues in their agenda. However, recognition of these structures is cardinal for the implementation of various chosen successful breastfeeding initiatives in the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI). These include breast feeding and child survival and Baby Friendly Hospital Initiatives. Additionally, the effective referral system between health facilities and community needs to be strengthened where they do not exist.
1.2 Statement of the Problem:
There has not been a mechanism put in place to keep proper or concrete records on the activities as well as indicators of Exclusive Breastfeeding and mothers support groups in hospitals, polyclinics and health centres in Nigeria. There has however been occasional figures produced from special exercises or survey carried out. For instance, (World Linkages, Nigeria, July 2000; Country Profile), in a study in the upper East region in Nigeria, revealed that among children less than two months old, 43 percent are exclusively breastfed. By the fourth to the fifth month, the figure drops to 22 percent. Moreover, on the average, globally, only 39 per cent of babies breastfeed exclusively, even in the first four months of life (UNICEF; WABA, 2003).
1.3 Research Questions
The question therefore is what the contemporary views of mothers and helpers about exclusive Breastfeeding at University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH) are, though without previous concrete reports or record in place.
1. Do the breastfeeding mothers know how important the exclusive breastfeeding is and how to do it?
2. Do they have confidence and where do they turn to when they face difficulty?
3. Are people around them such as fathers and grandmothers supportive especially when mothers have to resume employment soon after delivery?
1.4 The Purpose of the Study:
The purpose of the study is to ascertain the current feelings and views of a cross-section of the Breastfeeding mothers on a MCH clinic day at University of Benin Teaching Hospital (UBTH), about exclusive Breastfeeding in order to develop appropriate strategies.
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ABSRACT - [ Total Page(s): 1 ]This project aimed at ascertaining the knowledge, practice, attitudes, feelings and some beliefs of exclusive breastfeeding among nursing mothers at Legon Hospital. The study was that of a descriptive one that relied on data collection using questionnaires administered to 50 nursing mothers who are breastfeeding babies aged between 1-12 months. From the study ,majority of the children,17{34%} brought to the post natal clinic were between 3-4 months, with also majority of the participants from Ea ... Continue reading---
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ABSRACT - [ Total Page(s): 1 ]This project aimed at ascertaining the knowledge, practice, attitudes, feelings and some beliefs of exclusive breastfeeding among nursing mothers at Legon Hospital. The study was that of a descriptive one that relied on data collection using questionnaires administered to 50 nursing mothers who are breastfeeding babies aged between 1-12 months. From the study ,majority of the children,17{34%} brought to the post natal clinic were between 3-4 months, with also majority of the participants from Ea ... Continue reading---