Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women

Background: Neonates are a vulnerable group and therefore need more attention and care. Nepal is predominantly rural, where household newborn care practices are poor and some of which are also harmful. Many maternal and newborn deaths can be averted through changes in household level practices regar...

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Main Author: Sharma, S
Format: Technical Report
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
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Online Access:http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/91
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spelling oai:103.69.126.140:123456789-912022-11-08T10:29:22Z Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women Neonatal and Child Health Sharma, S cord care practice kangaroo mother care muslim women newborn care practices Background: Neonates are a vulnerable group and therefore need more attention and care. Nepal is predominantly rural, where household newborn care practices are poor and some of which are also harmful. Many maternal and newborn deaths can be averted through changes in household level practices regarding delivery and newborn care. Methods: A descriptive design was used and the study population consisted of 89 women. Door to door survey was conducted to find out the mother having child less than five year. Non-probability purposive sampling was adopted to select the Miyapatan and Miyagaun and information on newborn care practices collected by using semi-structured questionnaire and focused group discussion among women. Results: The study findings revealed that 67.4 percent delivered at home, 29.3 percent respondents practiced kangaroo mother care, 38.2 percent bathed immediately after birth. Most of (98.8%) used new blade/scissors to cut the umbilical cord and 68.4 percent applied oil/turmeric/ash etc in the stump after cutting the cord. Forty nine percent respondents’ breastfed within an hour of birth and still 44.9 percent respondents used prelacteal feeding. There is significant relationship between education, occupation, family type and residence with thermal care likewise age, occupation, family type and economic status with early initiation of breast feeding (p < 0.05%) but there is no relationship between any background characteristics with cord care practices (p>0.05%). Conclusions: Only one third of respondents practiced kangaroo mother care, half of them practiced early initiation of breast feeding and still one third of respondents practiced bathing immediately after birth of neonate. Even after years of efforts from governmental and non-governmental sectors to reduce neonatal mortality; home deliveries and unhealthy newborn practices are still prevalent. Thus focus should be on the behavior change at grass root level and appropriate strategies are needed to bring the positive change in newborn care practices. Keywords: cord care practice; kangaroo mother care; muslim women; newborn care practices. 2016-11-11T00:22:29Z 2022-11-08T10:10:17Z 2016-11-11T00:22:29Z 2022-11-08T10:10:17Z 2013 Technical Report http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/91 en_US application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
institution My University
collection DSpace
language en_US
topic cord care practice
kangaroo mother care
muslim women
newborn care practices
spellingShingle cord care practice
kangaroo mother care
muslim women
newborn care practices
Sharma, S
Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women
description Background: Neonates are a vulnerable group and therefore need more attention and care. Nepal is predominantly rural, where household newborn care practices are poor and some of which are also harmful. Many maternal and newborn deaths can be averted through changes in household level practices regarding delivery and newborn care. Methods: A descriptive design was used and the study population consisted of 89 women. Door to door survey was conducted to find out the mother having child less than five year. Non-probability purposive sampling was adopted to select the Miyapatan and Miyagaun and information on newborn care practices collected by using semi-structured questionnaire and focused group discussion among women. Results: The study findings revealed that 67.4 percent delivered at home, 29.3 percent respondents practiced kangaroo mother care, 38.2 percent bathed immediately after birth. Most of (98.8%) used new blade/scissors to cut the umbilical cord and 68.4 percent applied oil/turmeric/ash etc in the stump after cutting the cord. Forty nine percent respondents’ breastfed within an hour of birth and still 44.9 percent respondents used prelacteal feeding. There is significant relationship between education, occupation, family type and residence with thermal care likewise age, occupation, family type and economic status with early initiation of breast feeding (p < 0.05%) but there is no relationship between any background characteristics with cord care practices (p>0.05%). Conclusions: Only one third of respondents practiced kangaroo mother care, half of them practiced early initiation of breast feeding and still one third of respondents practiced bathing immediately after birth of neonate. Even after years of efforts from governmental and non-governmental sectors to reduce neonatal mortality; home deliveries and unhealthy newborn practices are still prevalent. Thus focus should be on the behavior change at grass root level and appropriate strategies are needed to bring the positive change in newborn care practices. Keywords: cord care practice; kangaroo mother care; muslim women; newborn care practices.
format Technical Report
author Sharma, S
author_facet Sharma, S
author_sort Sharma, S
title Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women
title_short Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women
title_full Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women
title_fullStr Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women
title_full_unstemmed Neonatal Health Care Practices among Muslim Women
title_sort neonatal health care practices among muslim women
publishDate 2016
url http://103.69.126.140:8080/handle/123456789/91
work_keys_str_mv AT sharmas neonatalhealthcarepracticesamongmuslimwomen
AT sharmas neonatalandchildhealth
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