Baby-friendly workplace initiatives in child feeding practice as predictors of infant and young child anthropometric indices in public health facilities of Southern Ethiopia
Habtamu Hasen, Samuel Kusheta, Efrata Abuhay, Hamdela Tumiso, Yenatfanta Leuel, Dinku Daniel, Mesganew Amare, Abraham Samuel, Yitagesu Habtu

TL;DR
This study in Ethiopia found that children in baby-friendly workplaces had better long-term nutrition, particularly less stunting, compared to those who were not in such programs.
Contribution
The study is the first in Ethiopia to assess the impact of baby-friendly workplace initiatives on child nutrition outcomes.
Findings
Children not in baby-friendly workplace initiatives were 2.26 times more likely to be stunted.
Wasting and underweight were not significantly associated with the initiative use.
The initiative showed potential to reduce chronic malnutrition in public health settings.
Abstract
Baby-friendly workplace is an effective evidence based initiative developed by the World Health Organization to protect and support maternal knowledge, beliefs, and confidence in infant and young child feeding practices. However, studies that show the effect of the baby-friendly workplace initiative on the nutritional status of infant and young children are not available in Ethiopia. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the nutritional status among baby friendly initiatives service utlizers and non utlizers children age 6–24 months in public health facilities of Southern Ethiopia. We conducted a comparative cross-sectional study from 1 to 30 June 2022 among 220 mothers with children aged 6–24 months. Data were collected through face-to-face interviews using a structured questionnaire. Data were entered into Epidata Software version 4.2 and then exported to IBM SPSS version 26 software…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Nutrition and Water Access · Breastfeeding Practices and Influences · Child Nutrition and Feeding Issues
