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Published in: International Breastfeeding Journal 1/2019

Open Access 01-12-2019 | Research

“Everybody breastfeeds if they have milk”: factors that shape exclusive breastfeeding practices in informal settlements of Mumbai, India

Authors: Sudha Ramani, Nikhat Shaikh, Sushmita Das, Shanti Pantvaidya, Armida Fernandez, Anuja Jayaraman

Published in: International Breastfeeding Journal | Issue 1/2019

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Abstract

Background

In India, though breastfeeding is universally practiced, exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) rates in urban informal settlements are low; and health programs face several challenges in promoting EBF. In this study, ensconced in one program area of a non-government organization, we focused on “positive deviant”- mothers who were able to practice EBF for six months and attempted to delineate factors that shaped their EBF practices. Typically, qualitative research from Lower and Middle Income countries on EBF has focused on understanding why women do not practice EBF; the converse perspective taken in this study has been less explored.

Methods

We employed the positive deviance approach which contends that important programmatic learnings can be attained from persons who adopt positive behaviours. We conducted twenty-five diverse, purposively sampled case-studies of “positive deviant” mothers from two urban informal settlements in Mumbai; and analysed these using a framework approach. The results were summarised using a socioecological framework (consisting of individual, interpersonal, organizational and environment levels).

Results

We found that mothers typically construed EBF as not giving breastmilk substitutes. Giving the infant minor supplements (water, honey) was not considered a violation of the EBF practice. The main themes that emerged as influencers of EBF included: at individual level, perceptions of having adequate milk; at interpersonal level, having role models who practiced EBF and having family support; at organizational level, advice from health workers (which was purported to play a secondary role); and at environmental level, financial constraints that limited access to supplements. One important finding was that women who practiced EBF could not always do it optimally; we encountered several instances of “poor EBF” practices, where mothers had breastfed infants inconsistently, allowing for long gaps between feeds, and had continued EBF even after six months.

Conclusions

There is an urgent need for health programs to clarify the meaning of EBF and counsel against “poor EBF” practices. Messages received by women from immediate family on EBF were powerful and families play an important role in the actualization of optimal EBF practices. Hence, it is imperative to counsel entire families on EBF rather than women alone.
Footnotes
1
Eleven mothers among our participants confidently denied giving their infant any minor supplements. The reasons given by them were: Other family role models did not use any such supplements; The infant was born during winter/rainy season and did not need water; The infant did not get any stomach ache or colic- and hence did not need supplements; Honey and other traditional medicines were not affordable. Women also reported receiving medical advice against minor supplements from doctors and nurses in the hospital when they delivered. This advice appeared to play an important role in minimising pre-lacteal feeds when women were in the hospital after delivery; but was not taken very seriously thereafter. Due to difficulty in recall, we could not analyse these results in detail.
 
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Metadata
Title
“Everybody breastfeeds if they have milk”: factors that shape exclusive breastfeeding practices in informal settlements of Mumbai, India
Authors
Sudha Ramani
Nikhat Shaikh
Sushmita Das
Shanti Pantvaidya
Armida Fernandez
Anuja Jayaraman
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
International Breastfeeding Journal / Issue 1/2019
Electronic ISSN: 1746-4358
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13006-019-0204-2

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