Knowledge of newborns’ mothers on breastfeeding during covid-19, hiv and tuberculosis infection attendee in selected hospitals
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.3329/jopsom.v42i1.73038Keywords:
Knowledge, breastfeeding, COVID 19, Tuberculosis, HIVAbstract
Background: Two-thirds of the HIV mothers planned to breastfeed their infants while one-third opted for formula feeding; same as during Tuberculosis or COVID-19 infection. What would be the mother do during breastfeeding? Whether the mother could breastfeed their newborn or not. For that it is necessary to assess the level of knowledge of newborns mother on breastfeeding during COVID-19, HIV and Tuberculosis. Methods: It was a descriptive type of cross sectional study was conducted at Maternal and Child Health Training Institute, Azimpur, Dhaka from 1st January to 31st December 2021. Mother of newborns who are willing to participate were conveniently selected. Around 289 sample was selected. Pre tested semi structured questionnaire was used to collect the data. Level of knowledge was measured by knowledge score. Each question of knowledge carries one (01) mark. Each correct answer had 1 mark and incorrect answer had 0 mark. 1-11 score (<60%) was categorized as fair knowledge; 12-15 score (60-79%) was categorized as good knowledge and 16-20% score (80% and above) had very good knowledge. Results: Age and knowledge of whether TB-positive mothers may breastfeed have an association (2=4.488, p = 0.034); age and knowledge of whether HIV-positive mothers can breastfeed have an association (2=9.632, p = 0.002). There is a correlation between occupation and knowledge of whether mothers who have COVID 19 positive status can breastfeed (5.044; p=0.046), as well as a correlation between occupation and knowledge of whether mothers who have TB positive status (9.365; p=0.002). Family income has a correlation with knowledge of whether mothers who are COVID 19 positive, HIV positive, or TB positive can breastfeed (2=17.695, p = 0.0001), COVID 19 positive mothers have a correlation with knowledge of whether they can breastfeed (2=7.511, p = 0.006), and HIV positive mothers have a correlation with knowledge of whether they can breastfeed (2=8.675, p = 0.003). Education level and awareness of whether COVID 19 positive mothers can breastfeed are correlated (2=10.315, p = 0.001), as are knowledge of whether TB positive mothers can breastfeed (2=10.880, p = 0.001). Conclusion: Develop targeted educational programs for mothers based on their demographic characteristics, such as age, occupation, and education level.
JOPSOM 2023; 42(1):40-47
Downloads
26
16
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Salma Akther, Khursheda Akhtar, Esrat Zahan Shawan
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Copyright Notice
Authors who publish in the Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine (JOPSOM) agree to the following terms that:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine (JOPSOM) the right of first publication of the work.
Articles in the Journal of Preventive and Social Medicine (JOPSOM) are Open Access articles published under the Creative Commons CC BY-NC License Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0). This license permits Share — copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and Adapt — remix, transform, and build upon the material.