Abstract

Religious fasting often involves abstention from animal source foods (ASFs). Although children are exempt, their diets are influenced by the widespread fasting practices. This study investigated the factors influencing ASF consumption among young children during the Lent fasting period in western Amhara, Ethiopia. We used baseline survey data from households with children 6–23 months of age (n = 2,646). We conducted regression analysis to examine the maternal and household factors associated with ASF consumption and path analysis to examine the direct and indirect effects of maternal knowledge, beliefs, social norms, and livestock ownership on ASF consumption. Only 24% of children consumed any ASF in the previous day—18% dairy products, 5% eggs, and 2% flesh foods. Mothers with high knowledge, beliefs, and social norms about feeding children ASFs during fasting had higher odds (odds ratio: 1.3–1.4) of children who consumed them. Compared with households with no ASFs, those with ASFs available were 4.8 times more likely to have children who consumed them. Most of the association between knowledge, beliefs and social norms, and ASF consumption was explained by pathways operating through ASF availability (approximately 9, 12, and 8 pp higher availability, respectively), which in turn were associated with higher consumption. Cow ownership was directly and indirectly associated with ASF consumption, whereas having chickens was indirectly associated with consumption via the availability pathway. Our findings corroborate the importance of maternal behavioural determinants related to feeding ASFs to children during fasting on ASF consumption via household availability and the positive influence of livestock ownership.

Highlights

  • Fasting is a partial or total abstinence from all or certain kinds of foods, drink, or both (Dictionary.com, n.d.)

  • In Amhara region, minimum meal frequency is even lower at 34%, minimum dietary diversity is 2%, and animal source foods (ASFs) consumption is 10% (Central Statistical Agency and ICF International, 2012)

  • This study investigated the maternal behavioural and material determinants of ASF consumption among young children during the Lent fasting period in western Amhara, Ethiopia

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Fasting is a partial or total abstinence from all or certain kinds of foods, drink, or both (Dictionary.com, n.d.). This study investigated the maternal behavioural (knowledge, beliefs, and perceived social norms) and material (livestock ownership and ASF availability) determinants of ASF consumption among young children during the Lent fasting period in western Amhara, Ethiopia. Maternal behavioural determinants (knowledge, beliefs, and social norms), ownership of livestock (chickens, cows, and goats or sheep), and having animal source foods (ASF) available in the house were important factors associated with ASF consumption among children. There is potential for improving ASF consumption through behaviour change during the fasting period, as many children even in households that own chickens and/or cows and goats are not being fed eggs or milk daily. Our findings on the importance of maternal knowledge, beliefs, and perceived social norms on ASF consumption via household availability, as well as the positive influence of livestock ownership, may apply in other populations where similar fasting practices are observed. On the relationship between behavioural factors and livestock ownership on ASF consumption

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| DISCUSSION
Findings
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
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