IYCN
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Copyright

USAID's Infant & Young Child Nutrition Project

  • Our legacy
  • Resources
  • Countries
  • News archives

IYCN materials

  • View all (111)
  • About IYCN (17)
  • Agriculture resources (5)
  • Community program resources (17)
  • Country briefs (12)
  • Formative assessments (20)
  • Our approaches (4)
  • Technical materials (17)
  • Training and BCC tools (35)

Topics

  • View all (251)
  • Agriculture and food security (25)
  • Behavior change communication (33)
  • Infant feeding and emergencies (9)
  • Infant feeding and HIV (73)
  • Maternal nutrition (11)
  • Micronutrients (15)
  • Monitoring and evaluation (12)
  • Multilanguage resources (27)
  • Policy and advocacy (40)
  • Research (42)
  • Technical publications (46)
  • Training and counseling (30)

Region

  • View all (251)
  • Africa (107)
  • Asia (11)
  • Global (120)
  • Latin America and the Caribbean (13)

Source

  • View all (251)
  • External (151)
  • IYCN (111)

Zimbabwe: ZVITAMBO infant feeding materials

Summary: These posters from ZVITAMBO (Zimbabwe Vitamin A for Mothers and Babies) contain key, consistent messages that are geared toward mothers, health workers, and other family and community members. The posters are supplemented by simple brochures.

  • Start Breastfeeding in the First Hour of Life
  • Expressing and Heat Treating Breast Milk
  • Make Breastfeeding Safer
  • Breastfeed Often
  • Breast Milk Only Birth to 6 Months! Nothing But Breast Milk
  • Breast Milk Only: Birth to 6 Months
  • How to Practice Exclusive Breastfeeding (Cover)
  • How to Practice Exclusive Breastfeeding (Inside)
  • How to Express and Heat Treat Breast Milk

 

Publisher Source:

  • External

Topic(s):

  • Training and counseling

Region(s):

  • Africa

Date Published:

2011

The US Agency for International Development (USAID) funded this website under the terms of Cooperative Agreement No. GPO-A-00-06-00008-00. The information provided on this website is not official US Government information and does not represent the views or positions of USAID or the US Government.

IYCN was implemented by PATH in collaboration with CARE; The Manoff Group; and University Research Co., LLC.