Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria

Background: Daycare centres/nurseries have become popular because of the need for working mothers to leave young children with caregivers. However, the high poverty level (54% relative and 35% extreme poverty) makes it difficult for disadvantaged parents to pay the high fees charged by the centres....

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Main Authors: Olayinka A. Abosede, Princess C. Campbell, Emmanuel I. Okechukwu, Ajibike O. Salako-Akande, Anthonia O. Onyenwenyi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2010-06-01
Series:African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/98
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spelling doaj-b8207c7825744421b261b5e84642f8f02020-11-25T00:52:52ZengAOSISAfrican Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine2071-29282071-29362010-06-0121e1e710.4102/phcfm.v2i1.9849Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, NigeriaOlayinka A. Abosede0Princess C. Campbell1Emmanuel I. Okechukwu2Ajibike O. Salako-Akande3Anthonia O. Onyenwenyi4Institute of Child Health and Primary Care,University of LagosInstitute of Child Health and Primary Care,University of LagosAction Family FoundationWELLCHILD Promotion Organization of NigeriaInstitute of Child Health and Primary Care,University of LagosBackground: Daycare centres/nurseries have become popular because of the need for working mothers to leave young children with caregivers. However, the high poverty level (54% relative and 35% extreme poverty) makes it difficult for disadvantaged parents to pay the high fees charged by the centres. This study describes an attempt to economically empower mothers through the organisation of free early life education in a peri-urban community in Lagos. Objectives: The aim of the study was to examine early life education for under-fives as a means of economic empowerment of mothers and sustainable poverty amelioration. Method: The methodology included a non-randomised selection of 34 disadvantaged mothers by criteria, a prospective intervention utilising community resources to organise early childhood education, an in-depth interview of mothers, and observation of the outcomes over a 5-year period. Results: The result of the study showed that no mother preferred keeping a child older than three years at home. Access to early childhood education gave mothers opportunity to undergo vocational training (1, 2.8%) and take up new/additional jobs (12, 35.3%). All mothers and 32 (80%) of the participating families more than doubled their income, earning up to twenty thousand Naira (approximately $182) per month from the first year of participation. Finally, selection criteria and periodic assessment of immunisation/growth monitoring records of participants’ children improved compliance with primary health care service utilisation. Conclusion: Organisation of early childhood education had the potential for sustainable poverty amelioration through economic empowerment of mothers.https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/98early life educationeconomic empowermentNigeriaperi-urban communitypoverty amelioration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Olayinka A. Abosede
Princess C. Campbell
Emmanuel I. Okechukwu
Ajibike O. Salako-Akande
Anthonia O. Onyenwenyi
spellingShingle Olayinka A. Abosede
Princess C. Campbell
Emmanuel I. Okechukwu
Ajibike O. Salako-Akande
Anthonia O. Onyenwenyi
Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria
African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
early life education
economic empowerment
Nigeria
peri-urban community
poverty amelioration
author_facet Olayinka A. Abosede
Princess C. Campbell
Emmanuel I. Okechukwu
Ajibike O. Salako-Akande
Anthonia O. Onyenwenyi
author_sort Olayinka A. Abosede
title Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria
title_short Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria
title_full Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria
title_fullStr Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of Lagos, Nigeria
title_sort sustainable poverty amelioration through early life education in a peri-urban community of lagos, nigeria
publisher AOSIS
series African Journal of Primary Health Care & Family Medicine
issn 2071-2928
2071-2936
publishDate 2010-06-01
description Background: Daycare centres/nurseries have become popular because of the need for working mothers to leave young children with caregivers. However, the high poverty level (54% relative and 35% extreme poverty) makes it difficult for disadvantaged parents to pay the high fees charged by the centres. This study describes an attempt to economically empower mothers through the organisation of free early life education in a peri-urban community in Lagos. Objectives: The aim of the study was to examine early life education for under-fives as a means of economic empowerment of mothers and sustainable poverty amelioration. Method: The methodology included a non-randomised selection of 34 disadvantaged mothers by criteria, a prospective intervention utilising community resources to organise early childhood education, an in-depth interview of mothers, and observation of the outcomes over a 5-year period. Results: The result of the study showed that no mother preferred keeping a child older than three years at home. Access to early childhood education gave mothers opportunity to undergo vocational training (1, 2.8%) and take up new/additional jobs (12, 35.3%). All mothers and 32 (80%) of the participating families more than doubled their income, earning up to twenty thousand Naira (approximately $182) per month from the first year of participation. Finally, selection criteria and periodic assessment of immunisation/growth monitoring records of participants’ children improved compliance with primary health care service utilisation. Conclusion: Organisation of early childhood education had the potential for sustainable poverty amelioration through economic empowerment of mothers.
topic early life education
economic empowerment
Nigeria
peri-urban community
poverty amelioration
url https://phcfm.org/index.php/phcfm/article/view/98
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