Feeding of infants and young children in tsunami affected villages in Pondicherry.

The study was conducted to identify the problems related to feeding of children post tsunami in four villages in Pondicherry. Data were collected from 100 randomly chosen families who had an infant or a young child below 3 years of age during Tsunami. Informants were the mothers. In the population studied, 30% mothers did not exclusively breast feed for 6 months; 58% bottle fed their children and 51% fed their infants with commercial formula. The occurrence of diarrhea was three times higher among children who were fed with free breast milk substitutes (BMS) than in those who were not fed with the same. Those populations, wherein a pre-existing tradition of artificial feeding is present, infants are at further risk during a crisis situation like Tsunami. Breast feeding practices need strengthening even in routine conditions to tackle a disaster rather than intervention after the disaster.

[1]  P. Choudhury,et al.  IAP workshop on disaster management practices: recommendations and IAP plan of action. , 2005, Indian Pediatrics.

[2]  R. Brennan Rapid health assessment in Aceh Jaya District, Indonesia, following the December 26 tsunami , 2005, Emergency medicine Australasia : EMA.

[3]  A. Redmond Natural disasters , 2005, British medical journal.

[4]  C. Orellana Tackling infectious disease in the tsunami's wake. , 2005, Lancet. Infectious Diseases (Print).

[5]  A. Seal,et al.  Review of policies and guidelines on infant feeding in emergencies: common ground and gaps. , 2001, Disasters. The Journal of Disaster Studies, Policy and Management.

[6]  T. Patten Breastfeeding promotion: a vital emergency intervention disregarded? , 1997, Africa health.