2008
DOI: 10.1038/jp.2008.173
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Early initiation of breast-feeding in Ghana: barriers and facilitators

Abstract: To explore why women in Ghana initiate breast-feeding early or late, who gives advice about initiation and what foods or fluids are given to babies when breast-feeding initiation is late. Qualitative data were collected through 52 semistructured interviews with recent mothers, 8 focus group discussions with women of child-bearing age and 13 semistructured interviews with health workers, policy makers and implementers. The major reasons for delaying initiation of breast-feeding were the perception of a lack of … Show more

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Cited by 80 publications
(100 citation statements)
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References 11 publications
(8 reference statements)
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“…22 The belief that breast milk does not become available until 3 days after birth is another common reason for delaying breast-feeding among mothers in rural India and Ghana. 23,24 Mothers may also delay feeding because the newborn has not cried for milk. 24 Several of these determinants, including maternal education, number of pregnancies and surrogates for socio-economic status, were examined but did not confound the association between breast-feeding initiation time and neonatal mortality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…22 The belief that breast milk does not become available until 3 days after birth is another common reason for delaying breast-feeding among mothers in rural India and Ghana. 23,24 Mothers may also delay feeding because the newborn has not cried for milk. 24 Several of these determinants, including maternal education, number of pregnancies and surrogates for socio-economic status, were examined but did not confound the association between breast-feeding initiation time and neonatal mortality.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The focus in this paper is not to describe these gaps nor is it a detailed description of the types of constraints that interventions need to address and, where they exist, facilitators to closing these gaps; these are covered in the accompanying papers. [7][8][9]13,14 Also included in this volume are two papers detailing how specific formative research findings were used to make decisions about the content and delivery of the intervention. These papers cover the two main community-based approaches to reducing neonatal mortality, namely women's groups 11 and home visits by community-based volunteers.…”
Section: Lessons Learnedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In all settings, the perceived quality and usefulness of the visits is low, counseling skills of ANC providers poor and delivery of health education messages ineffectual, as for example detailed in the accompanying paper on early initiation of breastfeeding. 13 ANC currently appears to be a missed opportunity both for health education and for delivery of essential interventions such as intermittent presumptive treatment with antimalarials in endemic countries.…”
Section: Lessons Learnedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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