AI Article Synopsis

  • In 1995, an Infant Feeding Survey assessed the feeding practices of 1822 mothers at urban health facilities, focusing on colostrum, exclusive breastfeeding, weaning, and bottle-feeding.
  • The results showed that 28.8% of mothers did not give colostrum, only 43.5% of 3-month-old babies were exclusively breastfed, and more than half introduced solids before 4 months; 20% used bottle-feeding.
  • The study highlighted the need for improved health education programs tailored to mothers' cultural backgrounds and emphasized the importance of supporting breastfeeding among employed mothers.

Article Abstract

Concern about a possibly increasing prevalence of bottle-feeding led in 1995 to an Infant Feeding Survey of 1822 mothers attending urban health facilities. Infant feeding practices including feeding of colostrum, exclusive breastfeeding, weaning practices and bottle-feeding were assessed. This revealed that 28.8% of mothers had not given colostrum to their babies, that 43.5% of 3-month-old babies were exclusively breastfed, and that solids were introduced before 4 months of age in over half of the study population. Bottle-feeding was used by 20% of the study population. Feeding practices differed in women of Highlands and of Coastal origin. The findings emphasize the need to strengthen health education programmes which take into account the mothers' different cultural backgrounds. The issue of breast-feeding by mothers in paid employment needs to be addressed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02724936.1998.11747949DOI Listing

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