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The roles of community nutrition scholars in changing mothers' child feeding, food preparation, and hygiene practices in southern Bangladesh

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Title The roles of community nutrition scholars in changing mothers' child feeding, food preparation, and hygiene practices in southern Bangladesh
 
Creator Kawarazuka, Nozomi
Ibrahim, F.
Rahaman, E.H.M.S.
Prain, Gordon
 
Subject gender
micronutrient deficiencies
sweet potatoes
 
Description Introduction: This qualitative study evaluates a nutrition and hygiene education
program led by trained community nutrition scholars for 5,000 mothers of
small children in the Khulna and Satkhira districts in southern Bangladesh. The
objectives of this study are as follows: (1) understanding the processes and
reasonings behind mothers’ improvement in child feeding, food preparation,
hygiene, and homestead garden production, (2) understanding men’s roles in
facilitating women’s behavioral changes, and (3) assessing the degree of changes
in subjective notions of self-confidence, decision-making, and recognition among
mothers and nutrition scholars.
Methods: Data were collected through 14 focus group discussions with 80
participants and in-depth interviews with 6 women community nutrition scholars.
Data was then analysed qualitatively by drawing on direct quotes from focus
group discussions and interviews with detailed interpretation and account for
respondents’ behaviors and perceptions.
Results: Overall findings confirm behavior changes by women, their spouses,
and other family members. Many women were able to independently decide to
change food allocation and child feeding practices after gaining self-confidence
through the training. Men performed vital roles, such as purchasing nutritious food
in local markets, providing labor for land preparation of homestead gardens, and
defending the women from the resistance to change by their mothers-in-law.
Discussion: While the study supports the literature that women’s bargaining
power in food/resource allocation is critical in child health and nutrition, the
evaluation found that this process involves negotiations among family members.
Engaging men and mothers-in-law in nutrition interventions have great potential
to make nutrition interventions more eective.
 
Date 2023-06-15
2023-06-20T01:38:36Z
2023-06-20T01:38:36Z
 
Type Journal Article
 
Identifier Kawarazuka, N.; Ibrahim, F.; Rahaman, E. H. M. S.; Prain, G. 2023. The roles of community nutrition scholars in changing mothers’ child feeding, food preparation, and hygiene practices in southern Bangladesh. Frontiers in Public Health, 11. ISSN 2296-2565. 12 p.
2296-2565
https://hdl.handle.net/10568/130757
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1135214
 
Language en
 
Rights CC-BY-4.0
Open Access
 
Format 12 p.
 
Source Frontiers in Public Health