Department of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, McGill University, Montréal, H4A 2S5, 5252 boulevard de Maisonneuve, 2nd Floor, Canada.
Department of Global Health and Population, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, USA, MA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Jul 3;24(1):1778. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-19291-2.
Providing nurturing care for young children is essential for promoting early child development (ECD). However, there is limited knowledge about how mothers and fathers across diverse contexts in sub-Saharan Africa care for their children and from whom they receive guidance and support in their caregiving roles. We aimed to examine caregivers' nurturing care practices and sources of parenting knowledge in rural Mozambique.
This is a secondary analysis using data from a qualitative evaluation of a pilot intervention to improve nurturing care for early child health and development within existing health systems. The evaluation was conducted across three primary care health facilities and their catchment areas in Nampula province, Mozambique. For this study, we analyzed data from in-depth interviews conducted with 36 caregivers (32 mothers and 4 fathers) to investigate mothers' and fathers' daily caregiving experiences. Data were analyzed using thematic content analysis.
Caregivers described various caregiving roles relating to general caregiving of young children (e.g., feeding, bathing, caring for child's health) and stimulation (e.g., play and communication) activities. Mothers more commonly engaged in general caregiving activities than fathers, whereas both mothers and fathers engaged in stimulation activities. Other family members, including siblings, grandparents, and aunts/uncles, were also actively engaged in general caregiving activities. With respect to sources of parenting knowledge, caregivers received parenting guidance and support primarily from their own mothers/parents and facility-based health providers.
These findings highlight the importance of adopting a holistic approach involving caregivers and their context and reveal potential strategies to promote caregiving and ECD in rural Mozambique and similar contexts.
为促进儿童早期发展,为幼儿提供养育关怀至关重要。然而,对于撒哈拉以南非洲不同背景下的母亲和父亲如何照顾子女,以及他们在养育子女角色中从谁那里获得指导和支持,我们知之甚少。我们旨在研究农村莫桑比克的照顾者的养育关怀实践和育儿知识来源。
这是对一项试点干预措施的定性评估的二次分析,该干预措施旨在改善现有卫生系统中的幼儿健康和发展的养育关怀。该评估在莫桑比克楠普拉省的三个初级保健设施及其集水区进行。在这项研究中,我们分析了对 36 名照顾者(32 名母亲和 4 名父亲)进行的深入访谈数据,以调查母亲和父亲的日常照顾经验。使用主题内容分析对数据进行了分析。
照顾者描述了与幼儿的一般照顾(例如喂养、洗澡、照顾孩子的健康)和刺激(例如玩耍和交流)活动有关的各种照顾角色。母亲比父亲更经常从事一般照顾活动,而母亲和父亲都参与了刺激活动。其他家庭成员,包括兄弟姐妹、祖父母和阿姨/叔叔,也积极参与一般照顾活动。关于育儿知识的来源,照顾者主要从自己的母亲/父母和以设施为基础的卫生提供者那里获得育儿指导和支持。
这些发现强调了采用涉及照顾者及其背景的整体方法的重要性,并揭示了在农村莫桑比克和类似背景下促进养育和儿童早期发展的潜在策略。