80 research outputs found
Examining the âUrban Advantageâ in Maternal Health Care in Developing Countries
Andrew Channon and colleagues outline the complexities of urban advantage in maternal health where the urban poor often have worse access to health care than women in rural areas
Sociocultural factors influencing breastfeeding practices in two slums in Nairobi, Kenya
Background: Despite numerous interventions promoting optimal breastfeeding practices in Kenya, pockets of suboptimal breastfeeding practices are documented in Kenyaâs urban slums. This paper describes cultural and social beliefs and practices that influence breastfeeding in two urban slums in Nairobi, Kenya.
Methods: Qualitative data were collected in Korogocho and Viwandani slums through 10 focus group discussions and 19 in-depth interviews with pregnant, breastfeeding women and community health volunteers and 11
key-informant interviews with community leaders. Interviews were audiotaped, transcribed verbatim, coded in NVIVO and analyzed thematically.
Results: Social and cultural beliefs and practices that result to suboptimal breastfeeding practices were highlighted
including; considering colostrum as âdirtyâ or âcurdled milkâ, a curse âbad omenâ associated with breastfeeding while
engaging in extra marital affairs, a fear of the âevil eyeâ (malevolent glare which is believed to be a curse associated with witchcraft) when breastfeeding in public and breastfeeding being associated with sagging breasts. Positive social and cultural beliefs were also identified including the association of breast milk with intellectual development and good child health. The beliefs and practices were learnt mainly from spouses, close relatives and peers.
Conclusion: Interventions promoting behavior change with regards to breastfeeding should focus on dispelling the beliefs and practices that result to suboptimal breastfeeding practices and to build on the positive ones, while involving spouses and other family members as they are important sources of information on breastfeeding
Overview of migration, poverty and health dynamics in Nairobi City's slum settlements
The Urbanization, Poverty, and Health Dynamics research program was designed to generate and provide the evidence base that would help governments, development partners, and other stakeholders understand how the urban slum context affects health outcomes in order to stimulate policy and action for uplifting the wellbeing of slum residents. The program was nested into the Nairobi Urban Health and Demographic Surveillance System, a uniquely rich longitudinal research platform, set up in Korogocho and Viwandani slum settlements in Nairobi city, Kenya. Findings provide rich insights on the context in which slum dwellers live and how poverty and migration status interacts with health issues over the life course. Contrary to popular opinions and beliefs that see slums as homogenous residential entities, the findings paint a picture of a highly dynamic and heterogeneous setting. While slum populations are highly mobile, about half of the population comprises relatively well doing long-term dwellers who have lived in slum settlements for over 10 years. The poor health outcomes that slum residents exhibit at all stages of the life course are rooted in three key characteristics of slum settlements: poor environmental conditions and infrastructure; limited access to services due to lack of income to pay for treatment and preventive services; and reliance on poor quality and mostly informal and unregulated health services that are not well suited to meeting the unique realities and health needs of slum dwellers. Consequently, policies and programs aimed at improving the wellbeing of slum dwellers should address comprehensively the underlying structural, economic, behavioral, and service-oriented barriers to good health and productive lives among slum residents
Food security in a perfect storm:Using the ecosystem services framework to increase understanding
Achieving food security in a âperfect stormâ scenario is a grand challenge for society. Climate change and an expanding global population act in concert to make global food security even more complex and demanding. As achieving food security and the millennium development goal (MDG) to eradicate hunger influences the attainment of other MDGs, it is imperative that we offer solutions which are complementary and do not oppose one another. Sustainable intensification of agriculture has been proposed as a way to address hunger while also minimizing further environmental impact. However, the desire to raise productivity and yields has historically led to a degraded environment, reduced biodiversity and a reduction in ecosystem services (ES), with the greatest impacts affecting the poor. This paper proposes that the ES framework coupled with a policy response framework, for example Driver-Pressure-State-Impact-Response (DPSIR), can allow food security to be delivered alongside healthy ecosystems, which provide many other valuable services to humankind. Too often, agro-ecosystems have been considered as separate from other natural ecosystems and insufficient attention has been paid to the way in which services can flow to and from the agro-ecosystem to surrounding ecosystems. Highlighting recent research in a large multi-disciplinary project (ASSETS), we illustrate the ES approach to food security using a case study from the Zomba district of Malawi
Effectiveness of home-based nutritional counselling and support on exclusive breastfeeding in urban poor settings in Nairobi: a cluster randomized controlled trial
Background: Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) improves infant health and survival. We tested the effectiveness of a homebased
intervention using Community Health Workers (CHWs) on EBF for six months in urban poor settings in Kenya.
Methods: We conducted a cluster-randomized controlled trial in Korogocho and Viwandani slums in Nairobi.
We recruited pregnant women and followed them until the infantâs first birthday. Fourteen community clusters
were randomized to intervention or control arm. The intervention arm received home-based nutritional
counselling during scheduled visits by CHWs trained to provide specific maternal infant and young child
nutrition (MIYCN) messages and standard care. The control arm was visited by CHWs who were not trained in
MIYCN and they provided standard care (which included aspects of ante-natal and post-natal care, family
planning, water, sanitation and hygiene, delivery with skilled attendance, immunization and community
nutrition). CHWs in both groups distributed similar information materials on MIYCN. Differences in EBF by
intervention status were tested using chi square and logistic regression, employing intention-to-treat analysis.
Results: A total of 1110 mother-child pairs were involved, about half in each arm. At baseline, demographic
and socioeconomic factors were similar between the two arms. The rates of EBF for 6 months increased from
2% pre-intervention to 55.2% (95% CI 50.4â59.9) in the intervention group and 54.6% (95% CI 50.0â59.1) in the
control group. The adjusted odds of EBF (after adjusting for baseline characteristics) were slightly higher in the
intervention arm compared to the control arm but not significantly different: for 0â2 months (OR 1.27, 95% CI
0.55 to 2.96; p = 0.550); 0â4 months (OR 1.15; 95% CI 0.54 to 2.42; p = 0.696), and 0â6 months (OR 1.11, 95% CI
0.61 to 2.02; p = 0.718).
Conclusions: EBF for six months significantly increased in both arms indicating potential effectiveness of using
CHWs to provide home-based counselling to mothers. The lack of any difference in EBF rates in the two groups
suggests potential contamination of the control arm by information reserved for the intervention arm.
Nevertheless, this study indicates a great potential for use of CHWs when they are incentivized and monitored
as an effective model of promotion of EBF, particularly in urban poor settings. Given the equivalence of the
results in both arms, the study suggests that the basic nutritional training given to CHWs in the basic primary
health care training, and/or provision of information materials may be adequate in improving EBF rates in
communities. However, further investigations on this may be needed. One contribution of these findings to
implementation science is the difficulty in finding an appropriate counterfactual for community-based
educational interventions.
Trial registration: ISRCTN ISRCTN83692672. Registered 11 November 2012. Retrospectively registered
Factors affecting actualization of the WHO breastfeeding recommendations in urban poor settings in Kenya
Poor breastfeeding practices are widely documented in Kenya, where only a third of children are exclusively
breastfed for 6 months and only 2% in urban poor settings.This study aimed to better understand the factors that
contribute to poor breastfeeding practices in two urban slums in Nairobi, Kenya. In-depth interviews (IDIs),
focus group discussions (FGDs) and key informant interviews (KIIs) were conducted with women of childbear-
ing age, community health workers, village elders and community leaders and other knowledgeable people in the
community. A total of 19 IDIs, 10 FGDs and 11 KIIs were conducted, and were recorded and transcribed
verbatim. Data were coded in NVIVO and analysed thematically. We found that there was general awareness
regarding optimal breastfeeding practices, but the knowledge was not translated into practice, leading to
suboptimal breastfeeding practices. A number of social and structural barriers to optimal breastfeeding were
identified: (1) poverty, livelihood and living arrangements; (2) early and single motherhood; (3) poor social and
professional support; (4) poor knowledge, myths and misconceptions; (5) HIV; and (6) unintended pregnancies.
The most salient of the factors emerged as livelihoods, whereby women have to resume work shortly after
delivery and work for long hours, leaving them unable to breastfeed optimally. Women in urban poor settings
face an extremely complex situation with regard to breastfeeding due to multiple challenges and risk behaviours
often dictated to them by their circumstances. Macro-level policies and interventions that consider the ecological
setting are needed
Sibling death clustering in India : genuine scarring vs unobserved heterogeneity
Data from a range of environments indicate that the incidence of death is not randomly distributed across families but, rather, that there is a clustering of death among siblings. A natural explanation of this would be that there are (observed or unobserved) differences across families, e.g. in genetic frailty, education or living standards. Another hypothesis that is of considerable interest for both theory and policy is that there is a causal process whereby the death of a child influences the risk of death of the succeeding child in the family. Drawing language from the literature on the economics of unemployment, the causal effect is referred to here as state dependence (or scarring). The paper investigates the extent of state dependence in India, distinguishing this from family level risk factors that are common to siblings. It offers some methodological innovations on previous research. Estimates are obtained for each of three Indian states, which exhibit dramatic differences in socio-economic and demographic variables. The results suggest a significant degree of state dependence in each of the three regions. Eliminating scarring, it is estimated, would reduce the incidence of infant mortality (among children who are born after the first child) by 9.8% in the state of Uttar Pradesh, 6.0% in West Bengal and 5.9% in Kerala
Feasibility and effectiveness of the baby friendly community initiative in rural Kenya: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial
Background: Interventions promoting optimal infant and young child nutrition could prevent a fifth of under-5 deaths in countries with high mortality. Poor infant and young child feeding practices are widely documented in Kenya, with potential detrimental effects on child growth, health and survival. Effective strategies to improve these practices are needed. This study aims to pilot implementation of the Baby Friendly Community Initiative (BFCI), a global initiative aimed at promoting optimal infant and young child feeding practices, to determine its feasibility and effectiveness with regards to infant feeding practices, nutrition and health outcomes in a rural setting in Kenya. Methods: The study, employing a cluster-randomized trial design, will be conducted in rural Kenya. A total of 12 clusters, constituting community units within the government's Community Health Strategy, will be randomized, with half allocated to the intervention and the other half to the control arm. A total of 812 pregnant women and their respective children will be recruited into the study. The mother-child pairs will be followed up until the child is 6 months old. Recruitment will last approximately 1 year from January 2015, and the study will run for 3 years, from 2014 to 2016. The intervention will involve regular counseling and support of mothers by trained community health workers and health professionals on maternal, infant and young child nutrition. Regular assessment of knowledge, attitudes and practices on maternal, infant and young child nutrition will be done, coupled with assessment of nutritional status of the mother-child pairs and morbidity for the children. Statistical methods will include analysis of covariance, multinomial logistic regression and multilevel modeling. The study is funded by the NIH and USAID through the Program for Enhanced Research (PEER) Health. Discussion: Findings from the study outlined in this protocol will inform potential feasibility and effectiveness of a community-based intervention aimed at promoting optimal breastfeeding and other infant feeding practices. The intervention, if proved feasible and effective, will inform policy and practice in Kenya and similar settings, particularly regarding implementation of the baby friendly community initiative. Trial registration:ISRCTN03467700 ; Date of Registration: 24 September 201
The feasibility of introducing rapid diagnostic tests for malaria in drug shops in Uganda
BACKGROUND: National malaria control programmes and international agencies are keen to scale-up the use of effective rapid diagnostic tests (RDTs) for malaria. The high proportion of the Ugandan population seeking care at drug shops makes these outlets attractive as providers of malaria RDTs. However, there is no precedent for blood testing at drug shops and little is known about how such tests might be perceived and used. Understanding use of drug shops by communities in Uganda is essential to inform the design of interventions to introduce RDTs. METHODS: We conducted a qualitative study, with 10 community focus group discussions, and 18 in-depth interviews with drug shop attendants, health workers and district health officials. The formative study was carried out in Mukono district, central Uganda an area of high malaria endemicity from May-July 2009. RESULTS: Drug shops were perceived by the community as important in treating malaria and there was awareness among most drug sellers and the community that not all febrile illnesses were malaria. The idea of introducing RDTs for malaria diagnosis in drug shops was attractive to most respondents. It was anticipated that RDTs would improve access to effective treatment of malaria, offset high costs associated with poor treatment, and avoid irrational drug use. However, communities did express fear that drug shops would overprice RDTs, raising the overall treatment cost for malaria. Other fears included poor adherence to the RDT result, reuse of RDTs leading to infections and fear that RDTs would be used to test for human immune deficiency virus (HIV). All drug shops visited had no record on patient data and referral of cases to health units was noted to be poor. CONCLUSION: These results not only provide useful lessons for implementing the intervention study but have wide implications for scaling up malaria treatment in drug shops
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