Infancy and Caring: Descriptions from Motherless Infants’ Caregivers in an Institution in Rural Tanzania

Caregivers at an institution for motherless infants in rural Tanzania participated in focus group interviews and participant observations. This paper aims at describing how they perceive infancy, caring and sensitivity in their everyday context. It adds knowledge from Tanzania about institutional in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychology and developing societies 2018-03, Vol.30 (1), p.105-125
Hauptverfasser: Vik (KV), Kari, Daudi (VZD), Vickfarajaeli Zebedayo, Kajula (LJK), Lusajo Joel, Rohde (RR), Rolf, Ubuguyu (OSU), Omary Said, Saibulu (JNS), Joseph Ndukusi
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 105
container_title Psychology and developing societies
container_volume 30
creator Vik (KV), Kari
Daudi (VZD), Vickfarajaeli Zebedayo
Kajula (LJK), Lusajo Joel
Rohde (RR), Rolf
Ubuguyu (OSU), Omary Said
Saibulu (JNS), Joseph Ndukusi
description Caregivers at an institution for motherless infants in rural Tanzania participated in focus group interviews and participant observations. This paper aims at describing how they perceive infancy, caring and sensitivity in their everyday context. It adds knowledge from Tanzania about institutional infant care and the concept of sensitivity in caregiving, based on an approach sensitive to culture and context. The main result is that the caregivers are most concerned with fulfilling the infants’ physical needs. They defined infants’ social and emotional needs in a variety of ways and gave accounts about what sensitivity in caring for infants meant in their context. They also described their workload, their burdens and their strengths, and demonstrated shortcomings in fulfilling the infants’ social and emotional needs. Interventions to promote emotional and social support in addition to fulfilling physical needs are crucial.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0971333617749141
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title Infancy and Caring: Descriptions from Motherless Infants’ Caregivers in an Institution in Rural Tanzania
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