Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
UNC Project-Malawi, Lilongwe, Malawi.
Matern Child Nutr. 2018 Jan;14(1). doi: 10.1111/mcn.12446. Epub 2017 Mar 10.
Before the prevention of mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) program was widely implemented in Malawi, HIV-positive women associated exclusive breastfeeding with accelerated disease progression and felt that an HIV-positive woman could more successfully breastfeed if she had a larger body size. The relationship between breastfeeding practices and body image perceptions has not been explored in the context of the Option B+ PMTCT program, which offers lifelong antiretroviral therapy. We conducted in-depth interviews with 64 HIV-positive women in Lilongwe District, Malawi to investigate body size perceptions, how perceptions of HIV and body size influence infant feeding practices, and differences in perceptions among women in PMTCT and those lost to follow-up. Women were asked about current, preferred, and healthy body size perceptions using nine body image silhouettes of varying sizes, and vignettes about underweight and overweight HIV-positive characters were used to elicit discussion of breastfeeding practices. More than 80% of women preferred an overweight, obese, or morbidly obese silhouette, and most women (83%) believed that an obese or morbidly obese silhouette was healthy. Although nearly all women believed that an HIV-positive overweight woman could exclusively breastfeed, only about half of women thought that an HIV-positive underweight woman could exclusively breastfeed. These results suggest that perceptions of body size may influence beliefs about a woman's ability to breastfeed. Given the preference for large body sizes and the association between obesity and risk of noncommunicable diseases, we recommend that counseling and health education for HIV-positive Malawian women focus on culturally sensitive healthy weight messaging and its relationship with breastfeeding practices.
在马拉维广泛实施母婴传播预防(PMTCT)计划之前,HIV 阳性妇女将纯母乳喂养与加速疾病进展联系起来,并认为 HIV 阳性妇女如果体型较大,成功进行母乳喂养的可能性更高。在提供终身抗逆转录病毒治疗的“B 方案+PMTCT”计划背景下,尚未探讨母乳喂养实践与身体形象认知之间的关系。我们在利隆圭区对 64 名 HIV 阳性妇女进行了深入访谈,以调查身体大小认知、HIV 和身体大小认知如何影响婴儿喂养方式,以及 PMTCT 妇女和失访妇女之间的认知差异。我们使用九种不同大小的身体形象轮廓图询问了妇女对当前、首选和健康身体大小的认知,并用关于体重不足和超重 HIV 阳性角色的情景短剧来引出对母乳喂养方式的讨论。超过 80%的妇女更喜欢超重、肥胖或病态肥胖的轮廓,大多数妇女(83%)认为肥胖或病态肥胖的轮廓是健康的。尽管几乎所有妇女都认为超重的 HIV 阳性妇女可以纯母乳喂养,但只有一半左右的妇女认为 HIV 阳性体重不足的妇女可以纯母乳喂养。这些结果表明,身体大小的认知可能会影响对妇女母乳喂养能力的信念。鉴于对大身体尺寸的偏好以及肥胖与非传染性疾病风险之间的关联,我们建议为马拉维 HIV 阳性妇女提供的咨询和健康教育侧重于具有文化敏感性的健康体重信息及其与母乳喂养实践的关系。