Is exclusive breastfeeding an option or a necessity in Africa? A pooled study using the deuterium oxide dose-to-mother technique
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Abstract
Given the valuable health, development,
and economic benefits of human milk
Exclusive Breastfeeding (EBF) is recommended
by the World Health Organisation
for the first six months of an infant’s life.
Many resource-limited regions in Africa do
not line-up with these recommendations,
therefore EBF promotion efforts on the continent
need to be scaled up and monitored.
This study explores the human milk intake
volumes of 5 countries (Benin, Central
African Republic, Morocco, South Africa
and Tanzania) both at country level and in a
pooled sample of children at 3 months (n=
355) and at 6 months (n=193). Mean human
milk intake volumes in the pooled samples
were 697.6 g/day at 3 months and 714.9
g/day at 6 months. EBF was determined
both by maternal recall as well as using the
deuterium oxide dose-to-mother technique,
using two different cut-offs of non-milk oral
intake. Comparison of these results showed
substantial over-reporting of EBF by maternal
recall, which suggests that actual rates
of EBF are even lower than reported, thus
highlighting the importance of scaling-up
EBF promotion strategies.
