# Perceived Causes of Illness Among Infants and Young Children in Bangladesh: An Exploratory Qualitative Study

**Authors:** Md. Fakhar Uddin, Asma-Ul-Husna Sumi, Akash Saha, Mubassira Binte Latif, Shariffah Suraya Syed Jamaludin, Nur Haque Alam, Mohammod Jobayer Chisti

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare13202627 · Healthcare · 2025-10-20

## TL;DR

This study explores how caregivers and healthcare providers in Bangladesh perceive the causes of illness in infants and young children, highlighting the need for comprehensive interventions.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the multifaceted, non-biomedical causes of child illness in Bangladesh from local perspectives.

## Key findings

- Individual factors like maternal illness and knowledge gaps contribute to poor caregiving practices.
- Socio-cultural factors such as supernatural beliefs and domestic violence influence child health outcomes.
- Environmental issues like pollution and poor sanitation are linked to respiratory and waterborne diseases.

## Abstract

Background and objective: Child illness remains a significant public health challenge in low- and middle-income countries, including Bangladesh, with complex multifactorial causes extending beyond biomedical factors. This qualitative study explored perceived causes of child illness from the perspectives of caregivers and healthcare providers in rural and urban Bangladesh. Methods: Twenty-three in-depth interviews with primary caregivers, grandmothers, healthcare providers, and a group discussion with four community representatives revealed four primary categories of perceived illness causes. Results: Individual causes included maternal illness, forgetfulness, and knowledge gaps that affected caregiving practices, leading to missed vaccinations, poor hygiene and feeding practices. Socio-cultural causes included supernatural beliefs, intra-household power dynamics, domestic violence, maternal work burdens, early marriage, adolescent motherhood, and dowry practices. Economic causes included irregular income, rising food prices, and marketing of unhealthy products. Environmental causes included poor housing ventilation, inadequate waste management, heat wave exposure, urban air pollution, and water contamination, causing respiratory and waterborne diseases. Conclusions: These findings illustrate that child illness results from complex interactions between individual, socio-cultural, economic, and environmental causes. Potential interventions can address these multifaceted causes through comprehensive approaches including caregiver education, maternal empowerment strategies, economic support programs, and household environment improvements.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Child illness (MESH:C562515), respiratory and waterborne diseases (MESH:D000069578), maternal illness (MESH:D000079262)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

71 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12564575/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12564575