Towards a Better Understanding of Exclusive Breastfeeding in the Era of HIV/AIDS: A Study of Prevalence and Factors Associated with Exclusive Breastfeeding from Birth, in Rakai,Uganda

Abstract
Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) is being promoted by WHO/UNICEF as the recommended mode of feeding for all infants from birth to around 6 months of age. It is also recommended for the initial few months, for infants born to HIV-positive mothers in the developing world where conditions may not be ideal for replacement feeding. A cross-sectional study was done to find the prevalence and factors associated with EBF from delivery, amongst mothers of infants 0–6 months of age in a rural Ugandan community with a high HIV/AIDS burden. A prevalence of EBF of 35.1 per cent was found. There was a very high use of prelacteal feeds. Factors positively associated with EBF from birth, after logistic regression, were: delivery from a health unit (OR 2.07; 95 per cent confidence interval, 1.2–3.6); and mother having a normal vaginal delivery (OR 10.54; 95 per cent CI, 3.0–36.6). Factors showing negative association were: male gender of child (OR 0.44; 95 per cent CI, 0.3–0.7); and age of child over 3 months (OR 0.48; 95 per cent CI, 0.3–0.7). Mothers knowledge of her HIV serostatus was not associated with EBF (p = 0.78). Breastfeeding is almost universal in this area but it is rarely exclusive from birth.