Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh

Purpose - Neonatal mortality rate is 24 deaths per 1,000 live births in Bangladesh and most of them die during early neonatal period. The purpose of this paper is to assess the knowledge and attitude of neonatal care practices among postnatal mothers in a tertiary care hospital in order to provide a...

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Main Authors: Sharmin Majumder, Zannatul Najnin, Shamim Ahmed, Shafi Ullah Bhuiyan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Emerald Publishing 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of Health Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JHR-05-2018-0015/full/pdf?title=knowledge-and-attitude-of-essential-newborn-care-among-postnatal-mothers-in-bangladesh
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spelling doaj-413bd0053efd4e018a5c3986fecd707b2020-11-25T02:00:09ZengEmerald PublishingJournal of Health Research0857-44212586-940X2018-11-0132644044810.1108/JHR-05-2018-0015617361Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in BangladeshSharmin Majumder0Zannatul Najnin1Shamim Ahmed2Shafi Ullah Bhuiyan3Bangkok Hospital, Bangkok, ThailandGreen Life College of Nursing, Dhaka, BangladeshDalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, CanadaSchool of Occupational and Public Health, Ryerson University, Toronto, CanadaPurpose - Neonatal mortality rate is 24 deaths per 1,000 live births in Bangladesh and most of them die during early neonatal period. The purpose of this paper is to assess the knowledge and attitude of neonatal care practices among postnatal mothers in a tertiary care hospital in order to provide a basis for the development of strategies to improve further. Design/methodology/approach - A cross-sectional study was carried out in the Dhaka Medical College Hospital, Bangladesh using a convenient sampling technique. In total 211 postnatal mothers were interviewed using a structured questionnaire and χ2 test was used to analyze the data. Findings - Among mothers, 37.9 percent were aged between 16–20 years; 16.1 percent had no institutional education; 55 percent were primipara and only 26.5 percent had attended antenatal visit for more than four times. Mothers had apparently good knowledge and attitude about thermoregulation, early initiation of breast-feeding, importance of providing colostrum to the newborn, exclusive breast-feeding (EBF) up to six months of age and immunization at birth. However, this study identified knowledge gap about cord care, eye care, first bathing and hygiene practices. Overall, only a small proportion of respondents had good level of knowledge (37 percent) and attitude (47.4 percent) on newborn care. Highly significant statistical association was found between the knowledge, attitude level and socio-demographic characteristics of respondents. Knowledge and attitude were strongly associated as well. Research limitations/implications - There is scope for improvement by providing health education to antenatal and postnatal mothers. Therefore, implementation of the guidelines outlined in the Maternal and Child Handbook (MCH) is highly recommended. Originality/value - There is scope for improvement by providing health education to antenatal and postnatal mothers. Therefore, implementation of the guidelines outlined in the MCH is highly recommended to enhance the knowledge and attitude on newborn care among postnatal mothers.https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JHR-05-2018-0015/full/pdf?title=knowledge-and-attitude-of-essential-newborn-care-among-postnatal-mothers-in-bangladeshneonatal carepostnatal mothersknowledge-attitude-practice (kap)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sharmin Majumder
Zannatul Najnin
Shamim Ahmed
Shafi Ullah Bhuiyan
spellingShingle Sharmin Majumder
Zannatul Najnin
Shamim Ahmed
Shafi Ullah Bhuiyan
Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh
Journal of Health Research
neonatal care
postnatal mothers
knowledge-attitude-practice (kap)
author_facet Sharmin Majumder
Zannatul Najnin
Shamim Ahmed
Shafi Ullah Bhuiyan
author_sort Sharmin Majumder
title Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh
title_short Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh
title_full Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in Bangladesh
title_sort knowledge and attitude of essential newborn care among postnatal mothers in bangladesh
publisher Emerald Publishing
series Journal of Health Research
issn 0857-4421
2586-940X
publishDate 2018-11-01
description Purpose - Neonatal mortality rate is 24 deaths per 1,000 live births in Bangladesh and most of them die during early neonatal period. The purpose of this paper is to assess the knowledge and attitude of neonatal care practices among postnatal mothers in a tertiary care hospital in order to provide a basis for the development of strategies to improve further. Design/methodology/approach - A cross-sectional study was carried out in the Dhaka Medical College Hospital, Bangladesh using a convenient sampling technique. In total 211 postnatal mothers were interviewed using a structured questionnaire and χ2 test was used to analyze the data. Findings - Among mothers, 37.9 percent were aged between 16–20 years; 16.1 percent had no institutional education; 55 percent were primipara and only 26.5 percent had attended antenatal visit for more than four times. Mothers had apparently good knowledge and attitude about thermoregulation, early initiation of breast-feeding, importance of providing colostrum to the newborn, exclusive breast-feeding (EBF) up to six months of age and immunization at birth. However, this study identified knowledge gap about cord care, eye care, first bathing and hygiene practices. Overall, only a small proportion of respondents had good level of knowledge (37 percent) and attitude (47.4 percent) on newborn care. Highly significant statistical association was found between the knowledge, attitude level and socio-demographic characteristics of respondents. Knowledge and attitude were strongly associated as well. Research limitations/implications - There is scope for improvement by providing health education to antenatal and postnatal mothers. Therefore, implementation of the guidelines outlined in the Maternal and Child Handbook (MCH) is highly recommended. Originality/value - There is scope for improvement by providing health education to antenatal and postnatal mothers. Therefore, implementation of the guidelines outlined in the MCH is highly recommended to enhance the knowledge and attitude on newborn care among postnatal mothers.
topic neonatal care
postnatal mothers
knowledge-attitude-practice (kap)
url https://www.emerald.com/insight/content/doi/10.1108/JHR-05-2018-0015/full/pdf?title=knowledge-and-attitude-of-essential-newborn-care-among-postnatal-mothers-in-bangladesh
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AT zannatulnajnin knowledgeandattitudeofessentialnewborncareamongpostnatalmothersinbangladesh
AT shamimahmed knowledgeandattitudeofessentialnewborncareamongpostnatalmothersinbangladesh
AT shafiullahbhuiyan knowledgeandattitudeofessentialnewborncareamongpostnatalmothersinbangladesh
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