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Perceived enablers of exclusive breastfeeding by teenage mothers in Ghana


Angela K. Acheampong
Makombo Ganga-Limando
Lydia Aziato

Abstract

Background: Exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months can prevent diseases, boost immunity and improve quality of lives of infants. Ghana  implemented programmes aimed at reaching the global target of increasing exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months to at least 50% by the  year 2025. The country witnessed a decline in the overall rate of exclusive breastfeeding and an increase in the number of teenage mothers.  Globally, teenage mothers are less likely to breastfeed than mothers of other age groups. Understanding enablers of exclusive breastfeeding by  teenage mothers is important for any intervention aimed at improving exclusive breastfeeding rates and the quality of lives of infants.


Method: The study used a qualitative, exploratory, descriptive and contextual design, with focus groups. A total of six group discussions were  conducted with 30 pregnant teenagers recruited from six public hospitals.


Results: Seven enablers emerged from the analysis of data. These included positive beliefs about the benefits of breast milk, family history of  positive exclusive breastfeeding outcomes, support of the intimate partner, approval of closed-family members, expert opinions of antenatal care  staff, teenage-oriented breastfeeding education and community-based breastfeeding education.


Conclusion: Health professionals and policy makers could learn from these enablers and use them to promote exclusive breastfeeding practices  amongst teenage mothers in Ghana. 


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2078-6204
print ISSN: 2078-6190