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Journal of Tropical Pediatrics 1995 41(6):354-359; doi:10.1093/tropej/41.6.354
© 1995 by Oxford University Press
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The Timing of Breastfeeding Initiation and its Correlates in a Cohort of Rural Egyptian Infants

M. Moshaddeque Hossain*, Randall R. Reves**, Maged M. Radwan***, Mostafa Habib*** and Herbert L. DuPont***

*Department of Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, UAE University P.O. Box 17666, Al Ain, United Arab Emirates
**Denver Disease Control Service and University of Colorado Health Sciences Center Denver, Colorado, USA
***Epidemiology Study Center Bilbeis Sharqiya, Egypt, and Center for Infectious Diseases, University of Texas, Medical School and School of Public Health Houston, Texas, USA

Recent data on the patterns and correlates of the timing of breastfeeding initiation in newborns are scanty for many countries including Egypt. To obtain such data in four villages in rural Bilbeis, we recruited apparently healthy, single neonates and their apparently healthy mothers within 4 days of child birth, and followed them prospectively during 1987 through 1989. All 150 neonates included in the analyses were breastfed for some duration. At the time of the first breastfeed, 36, 37, and 27 per cent of the neonates were aged < 2, 2–5, and ;≥ 6 hours, respectively. All neonates had received the first breastfeed by age 72 hours.In a multivariate, polytomous. logistic regression model, mode rn birth attendants and longer (> 8 hours) duration of labour were significantly associated with deferment of breastfeeding initiation till the neonate was aged ≥ 6 hours. Breastfeeding initiation appeared to be unduly delayed in our study mothers and infants given that they were apparently healthy during the early post-partum period. Later initiation ofbreastfeeding was associated with indiscriminate prelacteal feeding, earlier termination of breastfeeding, and unwelcome supplementation practices. Our findings emphasize the need to initiate and/or strengthen programmes to promote appropriate breastfeeding practices in Bilbeis and other comparable areas.


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