Journal ArticleUnknown
Effect of community-based peer counsellors on exclusive breastfeeding practices in Dhaka, Bangladesh: a randomised controlled trial
Authors
Author Affiliations
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Published InThe Lancet
Year2000
Citations405
Abstract
Background Most mothers breastfeed in Bangladesh, but they rarely practise exclusive breastfeeding. Hospital-based strategies for breastfeeding promotion cannot reach them because about 95% have home deliveries. We postulated that with the intervention of trained peer counsellors, mothers could be enabled to breastfeed exclusively for the recommended duration of 5 months. Methods 40 adjacent zones in Dhaka were randomised to intervention or control groups. Women were enrolled during the last trimester of pregnancy between February and December, 1996. In the intervention group, 15 home-based counselling visits were scheduled, with two visits in the last trimester, three early postpartum (within 48 h, on day 5, between days 10 and 14), and fortnightly thereafter until the infant was 5 months old. Peer counsellors…
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