Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda

Smallholder farmers continue to face food and nutrition insecurity. The timing, scope and effectiveness of interventions is influenced by decision-making and roles within households and communities, yet emphasis has majorly been placed on mothers. A cross-sectional study explored the child feeding p...

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Autores principales: Nabuuma, Deborah, Ekesa, Beatrice
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Süleyman Demirel University 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141490
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author Nabuuma, Deborah
Ekesa, Beatrice
author_browse Ekesa, Beatrice
Nabuuma, Deborah
author_facet Nabuuma, Deborah
Ekesa, Beatrice
author_sort Nabuuma, Deborah
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Smallholder farmers continue to face food and nutrition insecurity. The timing, scope and effectiveness of interventions is influenced by decision-making and roles within households and communities, yet emphasis has majorly been placed on mothers. A cross-sectional study explored the child feeding practices and extent of the father’s participation in child feeding among 433 farming households with children aged 6-35 months from two rural and two peri-urban districts in Central Uganda. Diets consumed by children were inadequate with only 37% meeting the minimum dietary diversity. About 65% of fathers participated in decision-making over child feeding with 10% all the time and 24% only a few times. Additionally, 48% of fathers participated in actual child feeding, 2% all the time and 23% only a few times. Main reasons for the level of father participation included the presence or absence of money or food; concern or lack of concern over the child’s health; father’s physical availability; and whether child feeding is part of a father’s responsibility or not. Fathers who participated in decision-making regarding child feeding were more likely to participate in actual child feeding (r=0.6, P<0.01). There is an opportunity for active engagement of fathers in nutrition-related interventions to enhance their participation and support in decisions concerning child feeding and actual child feeding for enhanced child and household food and nutrition security.
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spelling CGSpace1414902025-11-11T17:44:17Z Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda Nabuuma, Deborah Ekesa, Beatrice gender nutrition decision making dietary diversity father Smallholder farmers continue to face food and nutrition insecurity. The timing, scope and effectiveness of interventions is influenced by decision-making and roles within households and communities, yet emphasis has majorly been placed on mothers. A cross-sectional study explored the child feeding practices and extent of the father’s participation in child feeding among 433 farming households with children aged 6-35 months from two rural and two peri-urban districts in Central Uganda. Diets consumed by children were inadequate with only 37% meeting the minimum dietary diversity. About 65% of fathers participated in decision-making over child feeding with 10% all the time and 24% only a few times. Additionally, 48% of fathers participated in actual child feeding, 2% all the time and 23% only a few times. Main reasons for the level of father participation included the presence or absence of money or food; concern or lack of concern over the child’s health; father’s physical availability; and whether child feeding is part of a father’s responsibility or not. Fathers who participated in decision-making regarding child feeding were more likely to participate in actual child feeding (r=0.6, P<0.01). There is an opportunity for active engagement of fathers in nutrition-related interventions to enhance their participation and support in decisions concerning child feeding and actual child feeding for enhanced child and household food and nutrition security. 2024-01-07 2024-04-17T09:40:43Z 2024-04-17T09:40:43Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141490 en Open Access application/pdf Süleyman Demirel University Nabuuma, D.; Ekesa, B. (2024) Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda. International Journal of Agriculture, Environment and Food Sciences 8(1): p. 44-53. ISSN: 2618-5946
spellingShingle gender
nutrition
decision making
dietary diversity
father
Nabuuma, Deborah
Ekesa, Beatrice
Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda
title Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda
title_full Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda
title_fullStr Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda
title_full_unstemmed Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda
title_short Child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in Uganda
title_sort child feeding practices and male involvement in child feeding among smallholder farming households in uganda
topic gender
nutrition
decision making
dietary diversity
father
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/141490
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