Infant weaning knowledge and practices among mothers in ikenne local government area, ogun state – complete project material | Blazingprojects Postgraduate Thesis
Home / Estate management / Infant weaning knowledge and practices among mothers in ikenne local government area, ogun state – complete project material

Infant weaning knowledge and practices among mothers in ikenne local government area, ogun state – complete project material

 

Table Of Contents


Chapter ONE

INTRODUCTION

  • 1.1Introduction
  • 1.2Background of Study
  • 1.3Problem Statement
  • 1.4Objective of Study
  • 1.5Limitation of Study
  • 1.6Scope of Study
  • 1.7Significance of Study
  • 1.8Structure of the Research
  • 1.9Definition of Terms

Chapter TWO

LITERATURE REVIEW

  • 2.1Conceptual Framework
  • 2.2Historical Overview
  • 2.3Theoretical Framework
  • 2.4Empirical Review
  • 2.5Global Perspectives
  • 2.6Local Perspectives
  • 2.7Current Trends
  • 2.8Critiques of Existing Literature
  • 2.9Research Gaps
  • 2.10Summary of Literature Review

Chapter THREE

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

  • 3.1Research Design
  • 3.2Population and Sampling Techniques
  • 3.3Data Collection Methods
  • 3.4Research Instruments
  • 3.5Data Analysis Plan
  • 3.6Ethical Considerations
  • 3.7Validity and Reliability
  • 3.8Limitations of Methodology

Chapter FOUR

DATA PRESENTATION AND ANALYSIS

  • 4.1Data Presentation
  • 4.2Descriptive Statistics
  • 4.3Inferential Statistics
  • 4.4Qualitative Analysis
  • 4.5Comparison of Findings
  • 4.6Interpretation of Results
  • 4.7Discussion of Findings
  • 4.8Implications of Results

Chapter FIVE

SUMMARY, CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS

  • 5.1Summary of Findings
  • 5.2Conclusion
  • 5.3Recommendations
  • 5.4Contributions to Knowledge
  • 5.5Areas for Future Research

Thesis Abstract

Weaning
is the introduction of supplementary food to a child’s diet after the first six
months of life. Early introduction of feeds and incorrect weaning practices are
commonly found in communities around the world. This research was designed to
explore infant weaning knowledge and practices among mothers.

Descriptive
research design was adopted. The population were 260 mothers attending three
Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government. Sample size was
determined using Leslie Kish formula and simple random sampling was adopted to
select 100 mothers for the study. A designed questionnaire was used to collect
data from participants. Face and content validity of the questionnaire was
ascertained by presenting it to experts in the field. Reliability was tested
using split-half method and Cronbach alpha reliability coefficient was 0.85.
Data was processed using statistical package for social sciences (SPSS) version
21. Two research questions were answered using descriptive statistics of mean
standard deviation. Four hypotheses were tested using inferential statistics of
Pearson correlation at 0.05 level of significance.

The study revealed that 8(8%)
of mothers had low knowledge level on infant weaning, 50(50%) had moderate
knowledge level and 42(42%) had high knowledge level. Also, 3(3%) of mothers
had high practice level on infant weaning, 66(66%) had moderate practice level
and 31(31%) had low practice level on infant weaning. There is a significant relationship
between occupation and weaning practices among mothers (r = 0.035; p = 0.004). There is
also a significant relationship between educational level and
weaning practices among mothers (r = 0.003; p = 0.000), whereas there is no significant relationship
between ethnicity and infant weaning practices among mothers (r = 0.036; p = 0.723) and there
is a significant relationship between mothers knowledge level
and infant weaning practices among mothers (r = 0.086; p = 0.001).

In conclusion, infant weaning knowledge
and practices among mothers is moderate. The study recommended that nurses
should regularly train mothers on infant weaning to improve their knowledge and
practice regarding infant weaning.

Keywords Weaning, Mother, Knowledge, Practice,
Infants

Thesis Overview

<p>1.1 Background to the Study<br><br>Weaning is the introduction of supplementary food to a child’s diet<br>after the first six months of life. Infant weaning with supplementary feeds of<br>breast milk substitutes, early introduction of complementary feeding and<br>incorrect weaning from breast milk are commonly found practices in communities<br>around the world (Inayati, Scherbaum, Purwestri, Hormann, Wirawan, Suryantan,<br>Hartono, Bloem, Pangaribuan, Biesalki, Hoffmann, &amp; Bellows, 2012). The<br>period of weaning could involve a lot of problems and usually information gap exist<br>in relation to how and when weaning takes place. Adequate nutrition during<br>infancy and early childhood is essential for growth and development of children<br>(Ashmika, Deerajen, Prity &amp; Rajesh, 2013). It has been recognized worldwide<br>that breastfeeding is beneficial for both the mother and child as breastmilk is<br>considered the best source of nutrition for an infant (Ku &amp; Chow, 2010).<br>The World Health Organization (WHO) as said by Hanif (2011 recommends that<br>infants should be exclusively breastfed for the first six months after which complementary<br>foods are introduced along with breastmilk for up to two years of age or<br>beyond. The first two years of life are critical stages for a child’s growth<br>and development. Any damage caused by nutritional deficiencies during this<br>period could lead to impaired cognitive development, compromised educational<br>achievement and low economic productivity (Kimani-Murage, Madise, Fotso,<br>Kyobutungi, Mutau, Gitau &amp; Yatich, 2011).<br><br>Poor breastfeeding and complementary feeding practices, together<br>with high rates of morbidity from infectious diseases are the prime proximate<br>causes of malnutrition in the first two years of life. Breastfeeding confers<br>both short-term and long-term benefits to a child. It reduces infections and<br>mortality among infants, improves mental and motor development, and protects<br>against obesity and metabolic diseases later in life (WHO, 2010). According to<br>Kimani-Murage et al., (2011), the WHO<br>recommends exclusive breastfeeding in the first six months, beginning from the<br>first hour of life, to meet the infant’s nutritional requirements and achieve<br>optimal growth, development and health. The mother is advised to continue<br>breastfeeding up to two years of age or more and begin nutritionally adequate,<br>safe, and appropriately-fed complementary foods at the age of six months in<br>order to meet the evolving needs of the growing infant. Since weaning is a process<br>by which food other than breast milk is introduced gradually into baby’s diet,<br>first to complement the breast milk and then to wean totally off breast milk involve<br>selecting light nutritious food for easy absorption. Then later replace light<br>nutritious food with thicker feed using hygiene practices when preparing them<br>but majority of nutrition problems in rural areas are due to faulty weaning<br>food (Shadia &amp; Bedor, 2013).<br><br>Predictors of breastfeeding and weaning practices vary between and<br>within countries. Factors that influence the weaning process include infant<br>feeding problems such as refusal to eat, colic, diarrhoea and vomiting (Ashmika<br>et al., 2013). These factors<br>represent challenges for mothers and in turn may either directly or indirectly<br>influence the feeding pattern. In view of the identified factors, which are early<br>introduction of complementary feeding and incorrect weaning from breast milk,<br>the researcher would carry out a study on infant weaning knowledge and practices<br>among mothers in ikenne local government area, Ogun State<br><br>1.2 Statement<br>of the Problem<br><br>Weaning has been one of the most wrongly practiced processes in the<br>developmental stages of the children. It <br>was observed that mothers give their infant other food apart from breast<br>milk right from birth while some delayed supplementary diet till above Nine<br>months with either cases having negative effect on the infant. WHO (Hanif,<br>2011) recommends a gradual weaning period from 6 months to 2 years, this allows<br>for the child to still receive the benefits from breastfeeding, while also<br>consuming the necessary nutrients from the complementary foods. But almost half<br>of the mothers (52%) abruptly weaned their children while only 11.6% gradually<br>weaned their children as complementary food is being added to the children diet<br>(Somiya, 2014). The time of weaning is one of the most critical aspects of<br>child’s life. It is the transition period at which the child whose main food used<br>to be milk changes over to adult food. Usually if this period of change in diet<br>is well-planned and progresses smoothly, there will be no setbacks, but in a<br>large number of children, malnutrition usuallytakes place during this period.<br>Ten million children under the age of 5 years old die each year (Somiya, 2014).<br>More than half of the deaths occur because of poor weaning that leads to<br>malnutrition. If adequate health systems were in place nearly two-third of the<br>deaths could be prevented. The most vulnerable period for developing<br>under-nutrition remains the transition from breastfeeding to family foods.<br>Malnourished children often suffer the loss of precious mental capacities. They<br>fall ill more often. If they survive, they may grow up with lasting mental or<br>physical disabilities (Dinesh &amp; Sushilkumar, 2011).<br><br>Poor quality of weaning foods and improper weaning practices<br>predispose infants to malnutrition, growth retardation, infection, diseases and<br>high mortality (Somiya, 2014). Food is expected to be prepared adequately<br>containing the required nutrients as well as appropriate with a suitable<br>texture and temperature. Without the knowledge of proper weaning practices as<br>well as a perception of the child’s hunger needs, malnutrition and illness may<br>ensue. Thus, the weaning period is therefore a vulnerable time when the child<br>should be attentively cared for and observed so as to maintain health (Somiya,<br>2014). Therefore, information gotten on weaning will improve mother’s practice<br>of weaning since the mother is the most important person in a baby’s life for<br>both its physical as well as its psychosocial care and growth. The mother-infant<br>relationship is the most vital formative relationship for the child. There<br>arises a need to prevent wrong assumption of mothers on weaning process and<br>timing, there is need for sound education, effective information and sufficient<br>knowledge of weaning to be instilled in mothers. Nurses can be agent of<br>carrying out the educational needs for weaning infants in proper way.<br>Therefore, the need for a study on infant weaning knowledge and practices among<br>mothers in Ikenne Local Government Area, Ogun State.<br><br>1.3 Objective<br>of the Study<br><br>The main objective of this study is to explore infant weaning<br>knowledge and practices among mothers in Ikenne local government area, Ogun<br>State. The specific objectives are to:<br><br>determine the knowledge<br>level on infant weaning among mothers attending three Primary Healthcare<br>Centres in Ikenne Local Government Area;<br>2. &nbsp; &nbsp; assess the practice level on infant weaning among mothers attending<br>three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government Area;<br><br>3. &nbsp; &nbsp; assess the relationship between occupation and infant<br>weaning practices among mothers attending<br>three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government Area;<br><br>4. &nbsp; &nbsp; identify the relationship between ethnicity and infant<br>weaning practices among mothers attending<br>three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government Area;<br><br>5. &nbsp; &nbsp; assess the relationship between educational level and<br>infant weaning practices among mothers attending three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government<br>Area and<br><br>6. &nbsp; &nbsp; to determine the relationship between mothers<br>knowledge level and infant weaning practices attending three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government<br>Area.<br><br>1.4 Research Questions &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br><br>The following research questions were answered:<br><br>1. &nbsp; <br>What is<br>the knowledge level on infant weaning among mothers attending three Primary<br>Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government Area.<br><br>2. &nbsp; &nbsp; What is the practice level on infant weaning among mothers attending<br>three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government Area.<br><br>1.5 Hypotheses &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; <br><br>The following hypotheses were tested at 0.05<br>level of significance.<br><br>HO1. There is no significant<br>relationship between occupation and infant weaning &nbsp; &nbsp; <br><br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; practices among<br>mothers attending three Primary Healthcare Centres in<br>Ikenne Local<br><br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Government Area.<br><br>HO2.There is no significant relationship between<br>ethnicity and infant weaning practices among<br><br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; mothers attending three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local Government<br>Area.<br><br>HO3.There is no significant relationship between<br>educational level and infant weaning practices <br><br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; among mothers attending three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local<br>Government &nbsp; &nbsp; <br><br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; Area.<br><br>HO4.There is no significant relationship between mothers<br>knowledge level and infant weaning<br><br>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; practices attending three Primary Healthcare Centres in Ikenne Local<br>Government Area.<br><br>1.6 Scope<br>of the Study<br><br>This study covered infant weaning knowledge and<br>practices among mothers in Ikenne Local Government A rea, Ogun State. The study<br>is limited by recruitment of participants<br><br>1.7 Justification<br>for the Study<br><br>The study would help to establish inadequacy in infant weaning<br>knowledge and practice among mothers and also provide baseline data for<br>subsequent studies on infant weaning knowledge and practices among mothers.<br><br>This study would also help to provide recommendations for improving<br>inadequacies in infant weaning knowledge and practices among mothers.<br><br>The study would also assist health institutions and the government<br>at the federal, state and local level to plan strategies to improve infant<br>weaning knowledge and practices among mothers.<br><br>1.8 Operational<br>Definition of Terms<br><br>Weaning: introduction<br>of supplementary food to a child’s diet after the first six months of<br>life.<br>Mother:<br>Women who has a child with age from birth to 24 months.<br>Knowledge:<br>Mothers understanding regarding infant weaning as measured by knowledge<br>score.<br>Practice:<br>Mothers activity regarding infant weaning as measured by practice score.<br>Infants:<br>children aged from birth to 24 months of age.<br>Ikenne<br>local government area: A local government area in Ogun state.<br>Get Complete Project Now »<br>Talk to us right now: (+234)906-451-7926 (Call/WhatsApp)<br><br>Share a Comment<br>Purchase Detail<br>Hello, we’re glad you stopped by, you can download the complete project materials to this project with Abstract, Chapters 1 – 5, References and Appendix (Questionaire, Charts, etc) for N5000 ($15) only,<br>Please call 08111770269 or +2348059541956 to place an order or use the whatsapp button below to chat us up.<br>Bank details are stated below.<br>Bank: UBA<br>Account No: 1021412898<br>Account Name: Starnet Innovations Limited<br><br><br>The Blazingprojects Mobile App<br><br><br>Download and install the Blazingprojects Mobile App from Google Play to enjoy over 50,000 project topics and materials from 73 departments, completely offline (no internet needed) with the project topics updated Monthly, click here to install.<br><br>0/5 (0 Reviews)<br>Share this:<br>Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)<br>Like this:<br>Loading...<br><br>Tags: estate management and valuation project topics estate management final year project topics estate management project topics and materials estate management project topics for hnd estate management project topics in nigeria estate management project topics pdf free estate management project topics list of estate management project topics project topics for estate management project topics for estate management department project topics for estate management students project topics in estate management project topics in real estate management project topics on estate management project topics on estate management and valuation pdf project topics on estate management course project topics related to estate management and valuation project topics relating to estate management project topics under estate management real estate management project topics<br><br>CONTROL<br>Read Previous<br>EFFECT OF MERGER AND ACQUISITION ON EMPLOYEE MORALE (A CASE STUDY OF FIRST CITY MONUMENT BANK (FCMB), CALABAR) – Complete Project Material<br><br>Read Next<br>DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION OF A THREE PHASE AUTOMATIC CHANGE OVER SWITCH WITH GENERATOR STARTER AND CUT-OFF – Complete Project Material<br><br>Type and hit ENTER<br>Project Cost – N4000 ($15)<br>Bank: UBA<br>Account No: 1021412898<br>Account Name: Starnet Innovations Limited<br><br><br>Talk to us<br>Please call 08111770269 or 08059541956 to speak with us<br></p>

Blazingprojects Mobile App

📚 Over 50,000 Research Thesis
📱 100% Offline: No internet needed
📝 Over 98 Departments
🔍 Thesis-to-Journal Publication
🎓 Undergraduate/Postgraduate Thesis
📥 Instant Whatsapp/Email Delivery

Blazingprojects App

Related Research

Medical Rehabilitati. 3 min read

A Framework for Patient-Centered Design in Remote Medical Rehabilitation Programs...

This research focuses on creating a practical framework to guide the design of remote medical rehabilitation programs that are centered around the needs and pre...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Medical Laboratory S. 3 min read

A Framework for Standardizing Quality Control Practices in Clinical Laboratory Testi...

This research focuses on developing a clear and practical framework to standardize quality control practices in clinical laboratory testing. Quality control in ...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Mechanical engineeri. 3 min read

A Framework for Parametric Modeling of Additive Manufacturing Mechanical Properties...

This research focuses on developing a systematic framework to model the mechanical properties of materials produced through additive manufacturing (AM), also kn...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Mathematics. 4 min read

A Framework for Modeling Nonlinear Dynamics in Chaotic Systems...

This research aims to develop a comprehensive framework for understanding and modeling nonlinear dynamics in chaotic systems. Chaotic systems are complex system...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Materials and Metall. 4 min read

A Framework for Predicting Corrosion Resistance in Aluminum Alloy Composites...

This research focuses on developing a structured way to predict how well aluminum alloy composites resist corrosion, which is a common challenge in many industr...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Mass communication. 2 min read

A Framework for Analyzing the Impact of Social Media Influencers on Youth Political ...

This research examines how social media influencers affect the way young people engage with politics. In recent years, social media influencers—individuals wi...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Marketing. 2 min read

A Framework for Integrating Social Media Engagement into Customer Loyalty Models...

This research explores how social media engagement influences customer loyalty, aiming to create a new framework that combines these two areas. Customer loyalty...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Linguistics. 4 min read

A Framework for Analyzing Code-Switching as a Pragmatic Competence...

This research is focused on understanding how people switch between languages or dialects in everyday conversation, a phenomenon known as code-switching. Specif...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
Library Science Educ. 2 min read

A Framework for Enhancing Critical Teaching Skills in Library Science Education...

This research focuses on developing a clear and practical framework that can help improve the way library science educators teach critical thinking skills. Crit...

BP
Blazingprojects
Read more →
WhatsApp Click here to chat with us