Effect of the massage and body manipulations contained in the traditional daily bath on motor development of 830 infants beninois
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Abstract
In Africa and more particularly in Benin, many cultural corporal practices are made to newborns to promote their
development. Among these practices we have traditional body care that includes massage and various stretching
exercises (mechanical manipulation of the body). And several conclusions of the studies carried out on the motor
development of African children have put forward the hypothesis according to which these traditional bodily cares
would be at the base of the motor precocity observed with the latter. It is to verify these conclusions that we set
ourselves the objective of studying the effect of massage and mechanical manipulations on the motor development of
830 newborns in Benin. This longitudinal study grouped the newborns of the cities of Dangbo, Copargo, Kouandé and
Comè declared apparently healthy by the head doctors of their health zones. Our results show that the group of
newborns who received massage and mechanical manipulations of the body in their traditional body care acquired
early motor skills (sitting, crawling, crawling, standing up and walk) before all the other two groups. And the group of
newborns who only received the massage acquired all the motor skills that the newborns of the control group. This is
proof that massage and mechanical manipulations of the body are the fundamental causes of the early development of
Beninese infants
