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Volume 32, Issue 1: February, 2005
Abstract
Implementation of Health Education, Based on Ethnographic
Study, to Increase the Colostrum and Decrease Early Solid
Food Feeding
Hananto Wiryo, MD, PhD and M. Hakimi, MD, PhD
Traditionally, mothers provide banana to their neonates as
well as discharge their colostrum prior to breastfeeding,
increasing the risk of perinatal morbidity and mortality.
Health education modules, based on ethnographic study, to
discourage these detrimental practices were developed for
use by community leaders. Two thousand six hundred and seventy
neonates were followed from birth to 28 days. Overall, neonatal
banana feeding decreased 18.3% and colostrum feeding increased
32.8%. Religious leaders, who had strong community influence,
had the highest health module execution. Moreover, their influence
on the community was important. Overall, the use of ethnographic
study data to identify specific cues to action of individuals
in a community, such as community religious leaders, is an
effective and appropriate method for reducing the detrimental
customs of both early solid-food feeding of banana and colostrum
discharge prior to breast-feeding, positively affecting community
perinatal morbidity and mortality.
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