Kumeh Odell W, Fallah Mosoka P, Desai Ishaan K, Gilbert Hannah N, Silverstein Jason B, Beste Sara, Beste Jason, Mukherjee Joia S, Richardson Eugene T
Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Ministry of Health of Liberia, Monrovia, Montserrado, Liberia.
BMJ Nutr Prev Health. 2020 Dec 1;3(2):295-307. doi: 10.1136/bmjnph-2020-000140. eCollection 2020 Dec.
In Liberia, an estimated 32% of children under 5 are stunted. Malnutrition and hunger worsened during the country's civil war and were further exacerbated by the 2014-2016 outbreak of Ebola virus disease. Studies examining adherence to recommended infant and young child feeding practices frequently do so with an emphasis on the knowledge, attitudes and beliefs of mothers and caregivers. Often overlooked are the structural factors that enable or constrain their agency to practise evidence-based recommendations.
Between July and December 2017, we surveyed 100 Liberian mothers to assess the sociodemographic factors associated with the risk of severe acute malnutrition in children in Maryland County, Liberia. We also conducted 50 in-depth interviews at two government health facilities to qualitatively explore mothers' experiences, as well as health workers' understandings of the determinants of malnutrition in the region. We applied logistic regression to analyse quantitative data and inductive content analysis to thematically interpret qualitative data.
Mothers were less likely to have a child with severe acute malnutrition if they had an income greater than US$50 per month (adjusted OR (aOR)=0.14, p<0.001), were literate (aOR=0.21, p=0.009) or exclusively breast fed during the first 6 months of life (aOR=0.18, p=0.049); they were more likely to have a child with severe acute malnutrition if they were married or in domestic partnerships (aOR=8.41, p<0.001). In-depth interviews elucidated several social, economic and programmatic factors that shaped suboptimal feeding practices, as well as decisions for and against seeking formal care for malnutrition.
The lived experiences of Liberian mothers and health workers illustrate that child malnutrition is a direct consequence of abject poverty, food insecurity, illiteracy, the precarious nature of formal and informal work, and the lack of robust social protection. Behaviour change and health education interventions that do not seek to alleviate structural barriers to compliance are unlikely to be effective.
在利比里亚,估计32%的5岁以下儿童发育迟缓。该国的内战期间,营养不良和饥饿状况恶化,2014 - 2016年埃博拉病毒病的爆发更是雪上加霜。研究婴儿和幼儿喂养推荐做法的依从性时,通常侧重于母亲和照顾者的知识、态度和信念。常常被忽视的是那些促进或限制他们践行循证推荐做法的结构性因素。
2017年7月至12月期间,我们对100名利比里亚母亲进行了调查,以评估利比里亚马里兰州与儿童严重急性营养不良风险相关的社会人口学因素。我们还在两家政府卫生机构进行了50次深入访谈,以定性探索母亲们的经历以及卫生工作者对该地区营养不良决定因素的理解。我们应用逻辑回归分析定量数据,并采用归纳性内容分析法对定性数据进行主题解读。
如果母亲每月收入超过50美元(调整后的比值比(aOR)=0.14,p<0.001)、识字(aOR=0.21,p=0.009)或在孩子出生后的前6个月进行纯母乳喂养(aOR=0.18,p=0.049),其孩子患严重急性营养不良的可能性较低;如果母亲已婚或处于同居关系中(aOR=8.41,p<0.001),其孩子患严重急性营养不良的可能性较高。深入访谈揭示了几个影响不理想喂养做法以及关于是否寻求营养不良正规治疗决策的社会、经济和项目因素。
利比里亚母亲和卫生工作者的实际经历表明,儿童营养不良是赤贫、粮食不安全、文盲、正规和非正规工作的不稳定性质以及缺乏有力社会保护措施的直接后果。不设法减轻依从性方面结构性障碍的行为改变和健康教育干预措施不太可能有效。