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<title>IMPROVING MOTHERS’ PRACTICE OF CHILD SURVIVAL STRATEGIES  THROUGH BEHAVIOUR CHANGE COMMUNICATION IN DELTA STATE,  NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1593</link>
<description/>
<pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 07:41:38 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-19T07:41:38Z</dc:date>
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<title>IMPROVING MOTHERS’ PRACTICE OF CHILD SURVIVAL STRATEGIES  THROUGH BEHAVIOUR CHANGE COMMUNICATION IN DELTA STATE,  NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1594</link>
<description>IMPROVING MOTHERS’ PRACTICE OF CHILD SURVIVAL STRATEGIES  THROUGH BEHAVIOUR CHANGE COMMUNICATION IN DELTA STATE,  NIGERIA
ISIKWENU, OGHENEFEGO
Under-five mortality remains high in Nigeria and this could be attributed to low practice of Child &#13;
Survival Strategies (CSS) by mothers. Behaviour Change Communication (BCC) strategies have &#13;
been shown to favourably improve child survival practice. The health talk normally used for &#13;
antenatal education does not seem to be effective. This study was conducted to assess the effect of &#13;
Behaviour Change Communication on mothers’ practice of CSS in Delta State, Nigeria.&#13;
This quasi-experimental study involved a three-stage simple random sampling technique to select &#13;
one rural Local Government Area (LGA) from three Senatorial Districts, two communities (one &#13;
experimental; one control) per LGA and one primary health centre for each community where 40 &#13;
mother-child pairs were recruited. A pretested, semi-structured, interviewer-administered &#13;
questionnaire was used to collect information on socio-demographic, Knowledge, Attitude and &#13;
Practice (KAP) of CSS. Using a 45-point scale, knowledge was categorized into poor (0-14), fair&#13;
(15-30) and good (31+); 27-point scale was used to categorize attitude into negative (0-7) and &#13;
positive (8-27) and 15-point scale was used to categorize practice into poor (0-4), fair (5-10) and &#13;
good (11-15). WHO/UNICEF Guide for Community Resource Persons and Social Cognitive Theory &#13;
were adapted to develop interventions to address identified gaps from KAP of CSS. One BCC &#13;
intervention each: drama, audiovisual or talks were implemented weekly for three months per &#13;
experimental community. Anthropometric data of children was assessed using standard procedure &#13;
and analysed using WHO Anthro software. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics and &#13;
association between BCC strategies and KAP of CSS was determined using chi-square and paired t test at α 0.05.&#13;
Mothers’ age was 27.8±5.6 years, 22.1% had tertiary education and 38.3% earned &lt;N10,000 &#13;
monthly.Children’s age ranged from 0-15 months, 64.7% were 0-6 months and 49.2% were females. &#13;
Knowledge increased from 15.8% to 21.6%, positive attitude from 65.5% to 76.1% and good CSS &#13;
practice from 43.5% to 51.8% in experimental group after intervention. Mean knowledg score was &#13;
significantly higher in the experimental group (25.7±8.7) compared to the control group (11.9±7.9); &#13;
(t=-12.370, p&lt;0.05). The mean practice score was also significantly (t= -3.690, p&lt;0.05) higher in the &#13;
experimental group compared to the control group. Respondents who received drama, talk and &#13;
audiovisual treatment had 26.7%, 23.1% and 14.3% (X2&#13;
=4.53; p=0.33) good knowledge &#13;
respectively. Respondents in audiovisual strategy group had higher positive attitude (90.6%) &#13;
compared to those in talks (82.7%) and drama (55.6) which was significantly different (X2 = 6.29; &#13;
p&lt;0.05). There was no significant difference (F=1.103, sig = 0.335) in practice based on BCC &#13;
method. The proportion of mothers who intended to breastfeed for 24 months was significantly &#13;
different (X2&#13;
= 16.28; p&lt;0.05) at endline. All mothers took their children for growth monitoring post intervention compared to baseline (72.3%) in experimental group; (X2&#13;
=48.99; p&lt;0.05).&#13;
Use of social cognitive theory in designing the behaviour change communication intervention &#13;
improved knowledge, attitude and practice of child survival strategies among mothers in Delta State. &#13;
The strategy should be adopted in the design and implementation of appropriate child survival &#13;
education programs targeting mothers in Nigeria.
</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 01 Feb 2021 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2021-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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