Mapping exclusive breastfeeding in Africa between 2000 and 2017.

Natalia VBhattacharjee; Lauren E Schaeffer ORCID logo; Laurie BMarczak; Jennifer M Ross ORCID logo; Scott JSwartz; JamesAlbright; William M Gardner ORCID logo; Chloe Shields ORCID logo; AmberSligar; Megan FSchipp; +32 more... Brandon VPickering; Nathaniel J Henry ORCID logo; Kimberly BJohnson; CeliaLouie; Michael ACork; Krista MSteuben; AliceLazzar-Atwood; DanLu; Damaris KKinyoki; AaronOsgood-Zimmerman; LucasEarl; Jonathan FMosser; Aniruddha Deshpande ORCID logo; RoyBurstein; Lauren PWoyczynski; Katherine F Wilson ORCID logo; John DVanderHeide; Kirsten EWiens; Robert CReiner; Ellen GPiwoz; RahulRawat; Benn Sartorius ORCID logo; Nicole Davis Weaver ORCID logo; Molly RNixon; David L Smith ORCID logo; Nicholas JKassebaum; EmmanuelaGakidou; Stephen SLim; Ali HMokdad; Christopher JLMurray; Laura Dwyer-Lindgren ORCID logo; Simon I Hay ORCID logo; (2019) Mapping exclusive breastfeeding in Africa between 2000 and 2017. Nature medicine, 25 (8). pp. 1205-1212. ISSN 1078-8956 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-019-0525-0
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Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF)-giving infants only breast-milk (and medications, oral rehydration salts and vitamins as needed) with no additional food or drink for their first six months of life-is one of the most effective strategies for preventing child mortality1-4. Despite these advantages, only 37% of infants under 6 months of age in Africa were exclusively breastfed in 20175, and the practice of EBF varies by population. Here, we present a fine-scale geospatial analysis of EBF prevalence and trends in 49 African countries from 2000-2017, providing policy-relevant administrative- and national-level estimates. Previous national-level analyses found that most countries will not meet the World Health Organization's Global Nutrition Target of 50% EBF prevalence by 20256. Our analyses show that even fewer will achieve this ambition in all subnational areas. Our estimates provide the ability to visualize subnational EBF variability and identify populations in need of additional breastfeeding support.



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