Mengie Tesfa, Dessie Yadeta, Egata Gudina, Muche Temesgen, Habtegiorgis Samuel Derbie, Getacher Lemma
Amhara Regional Health Bureau, CDC Project, Monitoring and Evaluation Officer, Dessie, Ethiopia.
School of Public Health, College of Health and Medical Sciences, Haramaya University, Harar, Ethiopia.
Heliyon. 2022 Oct 5;8(10):e10923. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2022.e10923. eCollection 2022 Oct.
In underdeveloped nations, cultural norms that are harmful to women's health, such as food taboos, are responsible for five to fifteen percent of pregnancy-related deaths. Food Taboo traditions prevent women from consuming particular foods, which reduces dietary diversity and food quality and may have detrimental nutritional effects. However, little is known about Ethiopia's dietary taboos and related issues. So, the purpose of this study was to find out how common food taboos are among pregnant women in agro pastoralist settings, as well as the accompanying factors. 636 pregnant women were enrolled in a community-based cross-sectional study using a two-stage cluster sampling strategy, distributed over seven clusters. Data were exported from Epi Data version 3.01 to Statistical Package for Social Science version 20 after being entered. The prevalence of dietary taboos in this study was 67.4% (95% CI: 63.7%, 71.1%). Food taboos were independently and significantly predicted by lack of formal education [AOR = 1.97 (95% CI: 1.583, 4.496), low wealth index [AOR = 2.26 (95% CI: 1.173, 4.353)], absence of antenatal care visits [AOR = 6.16 (95% CI: 4.996, 10.128), lack of knowledge of maternal nutrition [AOR = 4.94 (95% CI: 3.799, 8.748)], and negative attitude toward maternal nutrition [ In the research area, dietary taboos were very common. Food taboos were independently predicted by low wealth index, lack of maternity care visits, lack of formal education, ignorance of maternal nutrition, and unfavorable attitudes. Therefore, it is highly advised that strong community-based maternal nutrition education and counseling, raising women's income, and preparing young women for study in order to improve their educational standing be implemented.
在不发达国家,诸如食物禁忌等对女性健康有害的文化规范,导致了5%至15%的妊娠相关死亡。食物禁忌传统使女性无法食用特定食物,这减少了饮食多样性和食物质量,可能会产生有害的营养影响。然而,对于埃塞俄比亚的饮食禁忌及相关问题,人们知之甚少。因此,本研究的目的是了解农牧区孕妇中食物禁忌的普遍程度及其相关因素。采用两阶段整群抽样策略,对636名孕妇进行了一项基于社区的横断面研究,这些孕妇分布在7个群组中。数据录入后从Epi Data 3.01版导出到社会科学统计软件包20版。本研究中饮食禁忌的患病率为67.4%(95%置信区间:63.7%,71.1%)。缺乏正规教育[AOR = 1.97(95%置信区间:1.583,4.496)]、低财富指数[AOR = 2.26(95%置信区间:1.173,4.353)]、未进行产前检查[AOR = 6.16(95%置信区间:4.996,10.128)]、缺乏孕产妇营养知识[AOR = 4.94(95%置信区间:3.799,8.748)]以及对孕产妇营养的消极态度独立且显著地预测了食物禁忌。在研究区域,饮食禁忌非常普遍。低财富指数、缺乏孕产妇护理就诊、缺乏正规教育、对孕产妇营养的无知以及不利态度独立地预测了食物禁忌。因此,强烈建议实施强有力的基于社区的孕产妇营养教育和咨询,提高妇女收入,并让年轻女性为学习做好准备以提高其教育水平。