Data collected during a prospective cohort study of infant feeding and health in rural Bilbeis, Egypt, were analysed to define prelacteal infant feeding practices, identify their determinants, and assess whether these practices were predictive of breastfeeding and supplementation patterns and diarrhoea incidence during infancy. Sixty per cent (89/149) of study infants were prelacteally fed sugar-water, teas, or both. Lack of milk in the mother's breast (74 per cent), and maternal exhaustion or illness following labour (29 per cent) were the two most commonly stated reasons for prelacteal feeding. After multivariate adjustment, significantly higher incidence of prelacteal feeding was associated with childbirth during the warmer months [odds ratio (OR): 2.4; 95 per cent confidence interval (CI): 1.1-5.1], birth attendants with modern training (OR: 5.5; 95 per cent CI: 1.7-17.5), and labour lasting > 8 hours (OR: 2.3; 95 per cent CI: 0.1-4.9). Prelacteally fed infants were significantly less likely to be exclusively breastfed in age periods 0-3, 4-7, and 8-11 weeks. Diarrhoea incidence was higher among prelacteally fed infants in age periods 0-11, 12-23, and 36-47 weeks. Indiscriminate practice of prelacteal feeding and early supplementation of breastfeeding need to be discouraged.
Planning, implementation and evaluation of programmes to promote appropriate infant feeding practices require detailed, current information about these practices in the target populations. To estimate the prevalences and identify the correlates of overall breast-feeding and of exclusive breast-feeding in different age periods during infancy, a cohort of 152 apparently healthy neonates and their mothers were followed during October 1987 through April 1989 in rural Bilbeis, Sharqiya Governorate, Egypt. Feeding data were collected through twice weekly home visits thus reducing the potential for bias in our findings due to respondent recall errors. The prevalence of overall breastfeeding in the infants declined from 100% in age period 0-11 weeks to 89% in age period 36-47 weeks. Mothers with previous living children were associated with significantly higher (odds ratio [OR]: 6.53, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.33-32.09) and ownership of refrigerators was associated with significantly lower (OR: 0.18, 95% CI: 0.05-0.67) overall breast-feeding prevalences in age periods 24-35 and 36-47 weeks, respectively. The prevalence of exclusive breast-feeding in breast-fed infants dropped from 20% in age period 0-11 weeks to 0% in age period 36-47 weeks. After multivariate adjustment, prelacteal feeding was significantly negatively (OR: 0.12, 95% CI: 0.04-0.37) associated with exclusive breast-feeding in age period 0-11 weeks. Nearly 90% of Bilbeis infants were breast-fed at age 47 weeks, but the initiation of supplementation at 0-11 weeks in 80% of breast-fed infants is contrary to current recommendations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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