Background: Maternal depression and other psychosocial factors have been shown to have adverse consequences on infant feeding practices. This study explored the longitudinal relationship of maternal depressive symptoms and other selected psychosocial factors with infant feeding practices (IFPs) in rural Ethiopia using summary IFP index. Methods: This study uses existing data from the ENGINE birth cohort study, conducted from March 2014 to March 2016 in three districts in the southwest of Ethiopia. A total of 4680 pregnant women were recruited and data were collected once during pregnancy (twice for those in the first trimester), at birth, and then every 3 months until the child was 12 months old. A standardized questionnaire was used to collect data on IFPs, maternal depressive symptoms, household food insecurity, intimate partner violence (IPV), maternal social support, active social participation, and other sociodemographic variables. A composite measure of IFP index was computed using 14 WHO recommended infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practice indicators. High IFP index indicated best practice. Prenatal and postnatal maternal depressive symptoms were assessed using the patient health questionnaire (PHQ-9). Linear multilevel mixed effects model was fitted to assess longitudinal relationship of IFPs with maternal depression and other psychosocial factors. Results: Reports of higher postnatal depressive symptoms (ß = − 1.03, P = 0.001) and IPV (ß = − 0.21, P = 0.001) were associated with lower scores on the IFP index. Whereas, reports of better maternal social support (ß = 0.11, P = 0.002) and active social participation (ß = 0.55, P 10 times). Responses were coded as 0 = never (i.e., no experience), 1 = rarely, 2 = sometimes, or 3 = often. Household food insecurity was categorized into four severity levels: food secure, mildly food insecure, moderately food insecure, and severely food insecure as per the algorithm described by Coates et al. [58]. A screening tool called HITS (Hurt, Insult, Threaten and Scream) was applied to assess intimate partner violence [59]. This data was collected from mothers within 3 days of birth. The scale has four items and each item was scored on a scale of 1 (never) to 5 (frequently) with total score of 20 possible. Then, sum score was computed and treated as a continuous variable in the model. Maternal Social support was measured using the Maternity Social Support Scale (MSSS) developed by Webster and colleagues [60] within 3 days of birth. The scale contains six items. Each item has measured on a five-point Likert scale of 1 (never) to 5 (frequently) and a total score of 30 was possible. Similarly, the score was treated as continuous variable in this study where a high score corresponds with a high level of perceived social support. Educational status of the mother was categorized into four as illiterate, primary, junior and secondary and above for analysis purpose. Marital status was dichotomized into married (married monogamous and married polygamous) and unmarried (single, widowed, divorced, and separated). Religion was categorized into three as Muslim, Protestant, and Catholic & Orthodox. Similarly, mothers’ age was categorized as < 25 years, 25–35 years and above 35 years. Gestational age at birth was dichotomized as term (37 weeks and above) and preterm (< 37 weeks). Birthweight dichotomized as normal (2500 g and above) and low birthweight (< 2500 g); however, birthweight was treated as a continuous data in the model. A wealth index was created following the methods described by the Demographic and Health Surveys for Ethiopia [21] using polychoric principal component analysis to represent a composite measure of a household’s cumulative living conditions and then separated into quintiles. We examined whether missing data on feeding practices and maternal depressive symptoms differed from those who were not missing these data. We compared these two groups on infants’ birth weight, household food security, and other key baseline sociodemographic variables. For the continuous variables, we used a t test for equality of means, and, for the categorical variables, we used Pearson’s chi-square tests. Participants’ characteristics, IFPs and maternal depressive symptoms were summarized using descriptive statistics. To assess longitudinal relationship of infant feeding practice (IFP) and maternal depressive symptoms, we assumed that the repeated measurements of IFPs taken from each infant, overtime, are correlated and it is expected that study participants changed feeding practices over time as infants gets older. To examine differences in IFP within individual subjects over the follow up period, a linear multilevel mixed effects (fixed effects and random effects) model with a random intercept and a random slope was fitted with maximum likelihood estimation method. The fixed effects describe a population intercept and population slopes for a set of covariates, which include exposures and potential confounders. Random effects describe individual variability in IFP and changes over time. By considering individual random slopes and intercepts, this model allows to examine the influence of covariates on the change in IFP over time. Subjects with IFP data from at least two assessment intervals were included in the analysis.
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