Nutrition-Related Knowledge, Attitudes, Practices, and Anemia Status of Lactating Mothers in Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo—A Cross-Sectional Analysis

Author:

Beitze Damaris Elisabeth1ORCID,Kavira Malengera Céline23,Barhwamire Kabesha Theophile24,Scherbaum Veronika1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Food Biofunctionality, Institute of Nutritional Sciences, University of Hohenheim, 70599 Stuttgart, Germany

2. School of Medicine and Public Health, Université Evangélique en Afrique, Bukavu B.P. 3323, Democratic Republic of the Congo

3. Département de Nutrition, Centre de Recherche en Sciences Naturelles/Lwiro, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo

4. Faculty of Medicine, Official University of Bukavu, Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Abstract

Maternal nutrition is impacted by personal and environmental factors including dietary intake, knowledge, food availability, and affordability. This cross-sectional analysis aimed to evaluate nutrition-related knowledge, attitudes, practices, and associations with hemoglobin concentration among lactating mothers in the Bukavu region, Democratic Republic of the Congo. In 444 lactating mothers, nutrition-related knowledge and practice were assessed by questionnaires and translated into knowledge and practice scores ranging from 0 to 1, attitudes and drivers of food choice were assessed, the Dietary Diversity Score (DDS) was assessed with 24 h dietary recalls in a potential range from 0 to 10, and hemoglobin (Hb) was measured in mothers and their infants. Anemia prevalence was 28.2% among mothers and 74.3% among infants aged 3–8 months. Nutritional knowledge and practice were limited (the median total knowledge score was 0.39, median DDS was 3.0). While there were slight positive correlations between knowledge and maternal Hb, DDS did not significantly correlate with either knowledge or Hb. Although half of the mothers stated a perception about their own susceptibility to anemia or vitamin A deficiency (56.4%, 47.4%), less than half of those could justify their estimation (40.9%, 44.2%). Taste (68.1%), appearance (42.5%), availability (29.0%), and health effects (25.6%) were important drivers of food choice. In conclusion, interventions on the different influencing factors including nutrition education strategies are needed.

Funder

Bread for the World

foundation Fiat Panis

Food Security Center, University of Hohenheim

German Academic Exchange Service

Ministry of Science, Research and Arts (MWK) Baden-Württemberg, Germany

Publisher

MDPI AG

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