Pica Practice among Pregnant Ghanaians: Relationship with Infant Birth-Weight and Maternal HaemogloLin Level
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Date
1999-06
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Ghana Medical Journal
Abstract
In this study the pica habit of 502 pregnant women
were studied. II was found that 48.01% of the
pregnant women had pica habit. Clay eating was
the major form of pica practised by the pregnant
women (28 .49%). Some of them also chewed
wooden-sponge or wooden-stick (9.76%) more
frequently. However a few of the pregnant women
chewed cola nut (4.98%). uncooked maize dough
(2.79%). chalk (1.20%). and fresh starch (0.80%).
Multiple pica was not observed among our study
population.
Two main reasons were given by the pregnant
women for eating cJay. One was to prevent salivation
or vomiting (16.14%) while the other was because
they liked its flavour (12.35%). Clay eating
Significantly correlated with maternal haemoglobin
concentration (r = -0.32). Pregnant women who ate
clay had a Significantly lower mean haemoglobin
concentration (11 .05 ± 0.59g/dl) than women who
did not eat day (11.86 ± 0.49gfdl; p<O.05). Those
who ate clay had persistently lower mean haemoglobin
concentration throughout pregnancy than
those who did not. The overall mean birth weight
of the 502 singleton infants delivered by the pregnant
women was 3.01 ± 0.50kg. There was no significant difference in the mean birth-weights of
infants born to women who ate clay (2.99 ±
0.39kg) and those who did not eat clay at all (3.03
± 0.51 kg) during pregnancy. Thus the observed
level of day intake did not significantly affect infant
birth-weight.
Clay pica is shown by this study to be associated
with low haemoglobin level. Medical doctors and
dieticians should ask pregnant women with anaemia
about pica habit. Education of women in general
about the effects of pica and other habits must
be intensified to reduce the prevalence of anaemia
during pregnancy.
Description
Journal Article on Pica Practise among Pregnant Ghanaian
Keywords
Pica, clay, birth-weight, haemoglobin, pregnancy