‘Men are not playing their roles’, maternal and child nutrition in Nanoro, Burkina Faso
‘Men are not playing their roles’, maternal and child nutrition in Nanoro, Burkina Faso
Objective: to collect context-specific insights into maternal and child health and nutrition issues, and to explore potential solutions in Nanoro, Burkina Faso.
Design: eleven focus groups with men and women from eleven communities, facilitated by local researchers.
Setting: the study took place in the Nanoro Health district, in the West-Central part of Burkina Faso.
Participants: eighty-six men (18–55 years) and women by age group: 18–25; 26–34 and 35–55 years, participated in the group discussions.
Results: participants described barriers to optimal nutrition of mothers and children related to a range of community factors, with gender inequality as central. Major themes in the discussions are related to poverty and challenges generated by socially and culturally determined gender roles. Sub-themes are women lacking access to food whilst pregnant and having limited access to health care and opportunities to generate income. Although communities believe that food donations should be implemented to overcome this, they also pointed out the need for enhancing their own food production, requiring improved agricultural technologies. Given the important role that women could play in reducing malnutrition, these communities felt they needed to be empowered to do so and supported by men. They also felt that this had to be carried out in the context of an enhanced health care system.
Conclusions: findings reported here highlight the importance of nutrition-sensitive interventions and women’s empowerment in improving maternal and child nutrition. There is a need to integrate a sustainable multi-sectorial approach which goes beyond food support.
3780-3790
Compaoré, Adélaïde
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Ouedraogo, Kadija
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Boua, Palwende R.
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Watson, Daniella
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Kehoe, Sarah H.
17aff028-df58-48b9-8e45-e1b353f61537
Newell, Marie-Louise
c6ff99dd-c23b-4fef-a846-a221fe2522b3
Tinto, Halidou
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Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Sorgho, Hermann
a8891940-5da3-42ad-b486-9504c0c53804
Compaoré, Adélaïde
dfea4d2b-f2e9-437f-a281-c21a9dc32cb3
Ouedraogo, Kadija
54caf043-2116-46bf-a464-2ca6f58574fc
Boua, Palwende R.
4b08fe0e-4c96-4f55-ac1f-9048a777ebcf
Watson, Daniella
26005c9f-779f-407b-b7e4-b7c9b812b6be
Kehoe, Sarah H.
17aff028-df58-48b9-8e45-e1b353f61537
Newell, Marie-Louise
c6ff99dd-c23b-4fef-a846-a221fe2522b3
Tinto, Halidou
8f149b48-e65f-4ae7-9e4e-5d7923e61c85
Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Sorgho, Hermann
a8891940-5da3-42ad-b486-9504c0c53804
Compaoré, Adélaïde, Ouedraogo, Kadija, Boua, Palwende R., Watson, Daniella, Kehoe, Sarah H., Newell, Marie-Louise, Tinto, Halidou, Barker, Mary and Sorgho, Hermann
(2020)
‘Men are not playing their roles’, maternal and child nutrition in Nanoro, Burkina Faso.
Public Health Nutrition, 24 (12), .
(doi:10.1017/S1368980020003365).
Abstract
Objective: to collect context-specific insights into maternal and child health and nutrition issues, and to explore potential solutions in Nanoro, Burkina Faso.
Design: eleven focus groups with men and women from eleven communities, facilitated by local researchers.
Setting: the study took place in the Nanoro Health district, in the West-Central part of Burkina Faso.
Participants: eighty-six men (18–55 years) and women by age group: 18–25; 26–34 and 35–55 years, participated in the group discussions.
Results: participants described barriers to optimal nutrition of mothers and children related to a range of community factors, with gender inequality as central. Major themes in the discussions are related to poverty and challenges generated by socially and culturally determined gender roles. Sub-themes are women lacking access to food whilst pregnant and having limited access to health care and opportunities to generate income. Although communities believe that food donations should be implemented to overcome this, they also pointed out the need for enhancing their own food production, requiring improved agricultural technologies. Given the important role that women could play in reducing malnutrition, these communities felt they needed to be empowered to do so and supported by men. They also felt that this had to be carried out in the context of an enhanced health care system.
Conclusions: findings reported here highlight the importance of nutrition-sensitive interventions and women’s empowerment in improving maternal and child nutrition. There is a need to integrate a sustainable multi-sectorial approach which goes beyond food support.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 August 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 October 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 484294
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/484294
ISSN: 1368-9800
PURE UUID: d10b3cbd-5b79-406c-a766-4c8605d911a5
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Date deposited: 13 Nov 2023 18:58
Last modified: 04 Jun 2024 01:45
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Contributors
Author:
Adélaïde Compaoré
Author:
Kadija Ouedraogo
Author:
Palwende R. Boua
Author:
Sarah H. Kehoe
Author:
Halidou Tinto
Author:
Hermann Sorgho
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