Abstract: We conducted 40 in-depth interviews and eight focus groups among mothers and fathers (n = 91) of diverse ages in western Uganda to define the relevant domains of maternal capabilities and their relationship to infant and young child feeding practices. This study was directed by a developing theory of maternal capabilities that posits that the impact of health-directed interventions may be limited by unmeasured and poorly understood maternal characteristics. Ugandan caregivers defined three major life events that constrain women’s capabilities for childcare: early pregnancy, close child spacing, and polygamous marriage. Women describe major constraints in their decision-making capabilities generally and specifically to procuring food for young children. Future nutrition programs may improve their impact through activities that model household decision-making scenarios, and that strengthen women’s social support networks. Findings suggest that efforts to transform gender norms may be one additional way to improve nutrition outcomes in communities with a generally low status of women relative to men. The willingness of younger fathers to challenge traditional gender norms suggests an opportunity in this context for continued work to strengthen resources for children’s nutritional care. Significance: Maternal factors such as autonomy are associated with child feeding practices and nutritional status, with varying degrees depending on the definition of maternal-level constructs and context. This study describes the events and processes that constrain maternal capabilities—intrapersonal factors that shape mother’s abilities to leverage resources to provide care to children—as they relate to nutrition and hygiene practices. We report community beliefs and understandings about which capabilities have meaning for child nutrition and hygiene, and develop a conceptual framework to describe how these capabilities are formed and describe implications for future nutrition programs in East Africa and similar settings.
The study was conducted in the Bundibugyo District of western Uganda. Bordered to the north by Lake Albert and to the west by the Democratic Republic of Congo, the 261,000‐person district remains one of the most remote and impoverished in the country. In 2010, the region was partially electrified, and the first paved road was constructed in 2013. These developments have ushered in a slow trend towards peri‐urbanization, though the majority of the population relies on subsistence farming and a small cash crop market for cocoa and matooke. The national fertility rate of 6.2 live births per woman is the highest of any country in the East and Southern African region. In the western region, women give birth to a mean of 6.4 children; over a fifth (22.6%) of women begins childrearing before the age of 20 years. The stunting prevalence (height‐for‐age Z score 0.9 was established by testing for mutual agreement of code assignment with a sample of 10 transcripts. Direct text quotes were extracted from transcripts with participant identification numbers in order to link quotes with demographic data. Data reduction was accomplished by organizing representative quotes within each theme into schematic matrices to provide a hierarchical visual display of themes. Related themes were grouped together under dimensions of the social ecological framework (Bronfenbrenner, 1979). Demographic data was tabulated into an electronic database and response frequencies were calculated in STATA version 12.0 (Stata Corp., College Station, TX, USA). The study was approved by The College of William and Mary Protection of Human Subjects Committee (PHSC‐2013‐03‐13‐8583‐sbickes) and by the Ministry of Health at the Mbale Regional Hospital Institutional Review Committee (UG‐IRC‐012).
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