Attitudes, beliefs and social norms regarding infant and young child feeding among Nigerian mothers, fathers and grandmothers across time

Author:

Schnefke Courtney H.1ORCID,Flax Valerie L.1ORCID,Ubanmhen Fred2,Alayon Silvia3ORCID,Bose Sujata4,Daniel Obinna1,Grimes Kathryn E. L.5,Allotey Diana6ORCID,Seiger Emily R.6,Arije Olujide7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Public Health Research Division RTI International Research Triangle Park North Carolina USA

2. Kantar London UK

3. Department of Global Health Save the Children Washington District of Columbia USA

4. FHI Solutions, Monitoring Learning and Evaluation Durham North Carolina USA

5. RTI International Global Public Health Impact Center

6. Department of Nutrition University of North Carolina‐Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

7. Institute of Public Health Obafemi Awolowo University Ile‐Ife Osun State Nigeria

Abstract

AbstractInfant and young child feeding (IYCF) interventions in low‐resource countries mainly target pregnant women and mothers of young children; however, fathers and grandmothers also influence IYCF practices. We conducted focus group discussions with mothers, fathers and grandmothers of young children across three time points in areas where an IYCF social and behaviour change intervention was implemented in Nigeria to explore differences by participant type and shifts over time in attitudes, beliefs and social norms related to breastfeeding and dietary diversity (DD). Overall, across time points, we found more discrepancies in attitudes, beliefs and social norms for early initiation of breastfeeding (EIBF) and exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) among different participant types than for DD. Although most participants agreed EIBF and EBF are good practices, mothers believed this more strongly than fathers and grandmothers; however, at endline, a shift towards acceptance of EIBF and EBF appeared among fathers and grandmothers. Across time points, all participant types acknowledged the nutritional and health benefits of green leafy vegetables and animal‐source foods but described various barriers to feeding them to children. Across time points, all participant types also highlighted the importance of health workers and antenatal visits as important sources of IYCF knowledge and facilitators to following recommended practices. Insights from this study highlight the importance of including key influencers of IYCF practices in qualitative research.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Nutrition and Dietetics,Obstetrics and Gynecology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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