Ideas about infant capabilities and toilet training practice have changed in the United States following cultural trends and the advice of child care experts. Anthropologists have shown that a society's specific infant training practices are adaptive to survival and cultural values. The different expectations of infant behavior of the East African Digo produces a markedly different toilet training approach than the current maturational readiness method recommended in America. The Digo believe that infants can learn soon after birth and begin motor and toilet training in the first weeks of life. With a nurturant conditioning approach, night and day dryness is accomplished by 5 or 6 months. The success of early Digo training suggests that sociocultural factors are more important determinants of toilet training readiness than is currently thought.
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August 1977
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August 01 1977
Cultural Relativity of Toilet Training Readiness: A Perspective From East Africa
Marten W. deVries;
Marten W. deVries
Departments of Psychiatry and Anthropology, University of Rochester (N.Y.), and the Bureau of Educational Research, Child Development Research Unit, Nairobi, Kenya
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M. Rachel deVries
M. Rachel deVries
Departments of Psychiatry and Anthropology, University of Rochester (N.Y.), and the Bureau of Educational Research, Child Development Research Unit, Nairobi, Kenya
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Pediatrics (1977) 60 (2): 170–177.
Article history
Received:
September 04 1976
Accepted:
January 14 1977
Citation
Marten W. deVries, M. Rachel deVries; Cultural Relativity of Toilet Training Readiness: A Perspective From East Africa. Pediatrics August 1977; 60 (2): 170–177. 10.1542/peds.60.2.170
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