Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Infant feeding is a subject of worry in prevention of mother to child
transmission (pMTCT) programmes in settings where breastfeeding is normative.
Nurse-counsellors, expected to counsel HIV-positive women on safer infant feeding
methods as defined in national/international guidelines, are faced with a number
of challenges. This study aims to explore the experiences and situated concerns
of nurses working as infant feeding counsellors to HIV-positive mothers enrolled
in pMTCT programmes in the Kilimanjaro region, northern Tanzania.
METHODS: A qualitative study was conducted using in-depth interviews and focus
group discussions (FGDs) with 25 nurse-counsellors at four pMTCT sites.
Interviews were handwritten and FGDs were tape-recorded and transcribed, and the
programme Open Code assisted in sorting and structuring the data. Analysis was
performed using 'content analysis.'
RESULTS: The findings revealed a high level of stress and frustration among the
nurse-counsellors. They found themselves unable to give qualified and relevant
advice to HIV-positive women on how best to feed their infants. They were
confused regarding the appropriateness of the feeding options they were expected
to advise HIV-positive women to employ, and perceived both exclusive
breastfeeding and exclusive replacement feeding as culturally and socially
unsuitable. However, most counsellors believed that formula feeding was the right
way for an HIV-positive woman to feed her infant. They expressed a lack of
confidence in their own knowledge of HIV and infant feeding, as well as in their
own skills in assessing a woman's possibilities of adhering to a particular
method of feeding. Moreover, the nurses were in general not comfortable in their
newly gained role as counsellors and felt that it undermined the authority and
trust traditionally vested in nursing as a knowledgeable and caring profession.
CONCLUSION: The findings illuminate the immense burden placed on nurses in their
role as infant feeding counsellors in pMTCT programmes and the urgent need to
provide the training and support structure necessary to promote professional
confidence and skills. The organisation of counselling services must to a larger
extent take into account the local realities in which nurses construct their role
as counsellors to HIV-positive childbearing women.