Infant feeding practices in urban and rural southern Katanga communities in Democratic Republic of Congo
Journal Title: The Journal of Medical Research - Year 2016, Vol 2, Issue 3
Abstract
Introduction: The results of previous scientific studies made in China and Vietnam have shown a big difference in feeding practices of children living in rural areas and those living in urban areas suggesting the influence of economic and socio-cultural factors. The aim of the study is to compare feeding practices of children under the age of five years between urban and rural areas in southern Katanga in the Democratic Republic of Congo (Central Africa). Methods: This is a cross-sectional and descriptive study of 1630 mother infant pairs recruited from 250 randomly chosen households from each of 5 different villages near the town of Lubumbashi and two urban areas (Lubumbashi and Kampemba). Results: The proportions of mothers who initiate breastfeeding within one hour after birth in urban and rural areas were respectively 48.3% and 46.0% (ORa: 1.32; CI95%: 1.01-1.72). 44.2% of the mother in urban areas exclusively breastfed their children until the age of 6 months versus 14.5% in rural areas (p<0.001). The average age of the children when they stopped breastfeeding was 16.4 months in urban areas versus 17.9 months in rural areas (p<0.001). 91.3% of first foods given in urban areas were cereals (p<0.001) versus 86.8% in rural areas. Conclusion: The study showed that mothers living in rural areas breastfeed longer than those who live in urban areas. Moreover, our results show that mother in rural areas use infant formulas and introduce solid, semi-solid or soft food sooner and more often than women in urban areas.
Lung malignancies in HIV infected patients
Respiratory diseases including malignancies are a significant source of morbidity and mortality among patients infected with HIV. Malignancies such as Kaposi Sarcoma (KS) and Non Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL) have for long been...
Personality traits, happiness and life satisfaction, in a sample of Nigerian adolescents
Happiness is said to be associated with the three basic elements of subjective well-being such as frequent and repeated positive affect, elevated life satisfaction and uncommon negative affect. The Big five personality i...
Developing Drug De-addiction Services in East Sikkim, Report by Singtam District Hospital
According to World Drug Report, an estimated 250 million people between the ages of 15 and 64 had used at least one substance in 2014. Approximately 29million people are suffering with substance use disorder with 207,000...
Women’s mental health campaign in East Sikkim
Mental illnesses affect women and man equally but differently with some mental illness more common in women [1,2] . Anxiety, depression, eating disorders, deliberate self harm, and other neurotic disorders are more preva...
Kawasaki disease in an infant: Diagnostic and therapeutic challenges at the University Teaching Hospital of Yaoundé, Cameroon
Introduction: Kawasaki disease (KD) is an acute multi-systemic vasculitis which represents the leading etiology of acquired heart disease in children in high-income countries. Its rarity in black Africans may lead to mis...