Title: Interventions to Promote Breastfeeding
1Interventions to Promote Breastfeeding
- Report for the Healthy Start
- Research to Practice Workgroup
- Jennifer Carvalho Salemi
2Promoting Breastfeeding from a Social Ecological
Framework
3Overview of Interventions
- Macro-level
- Media and Social Marketing
- National Policies
- Maternity Leave
- Implementation of WHO code
- BFHI
- Organizational Level
- Hospital and Maternity Care Practices
- Workplace Support
- Interpersonal Level
- Peer support
- Professional support and encouragement
- Supportive home environment
4Evidence-base
- Limits to Evidence-base
- Paucity of good, well-designed research in this
area - Lack of funding
- Most studies are small-scale few large-scale
RCTs - Methodological limitations
- Statistical significance not included
- Data not conducive to clear interpretation
- Inconsistency in definitions and outcome measures
(exclusive/non-exclusive breastfeeding) - Problem with relying on RCTs for evidence of
effectiveness - Many promising strategies have not been formally
evaluated - RCTs not always feasible or ethical
- For example, RCT study of commercial discharge
packets would be unethical in countries where all
hospitals already adhere to the International
Code
5Evidence-based practices
- Summary of evidence for interventions
- Evidence-based interventions for which evidence
has been fully evaluated - Promising interventions have an established
history or strong rationale for their use, but
that have not been formally evaluated in
large-scale studies. - Limited effectiveness interventions for which
there is limited or no evidence to support their
use.
6Recommendations for Action
- The predictors and barriers of breastfeeding are
numerous and complex. - Many potentially effective strategies have not
and may not be studied in good-quality/ RCTs - The Center for Disease Control and the US
Department of Health and Human Services advocate
the implementation of numerous interventions with
limited evidence of effectiveness. - CDC recommends that if they are used, an
evaluation of their effectiveness be carried out
before widely disseminating the intervention.
7Overview of Interventions
8Media and Social Marketing
9Description
- Media campaigns
- Social marketing
- Multi-faceted approaches that target not only
women, but their support system as well. - Ban on marketing of infant formula at health care
facilities.
10Media and Social Marketing
- Rationale
- Present positive images of breastfeeding
- Normalize the concept of breastfeeding
- ? Infant formula companies distribute patient
education packets in hospitals. - Advertise formula and often contain free formula
samples. - Distribution in hospitals and maternity centers
sends a message that formula feeding is
encouraged by health care professionals - ? Social marketing of BF counteracts marketing of
infant formula
11Evidence-base practices
- Media campaigns that promote positive images of
breastfeeding, especially television commercials,
do improve attitudes towards breastfeeding and
increase initiation rates. - Hospital distribution of commercially produced
education packets has been shown to decrease
breastfeeding duration. - Especially among groups most at-risk
- Primiparas
- Women with low levels of educational attainment
- Women who become ill after birth
12Promising practices
- Social Marketing Approach
- Identify the factors that influence
infant-feeding decisions among women in the
target audience - Identify their support system husbands,
boyfriends, health care providers - Find out what motivates and deters them from
encouraging women to breastfeed - Use these results to develop marketing strategy
that addresses the benefits and barriers that are
important to this population of women.
13National International Policies
- WHO International Code of Marketing of
Breast-milk substitutes - Baby- Friendly Hospital Initiative
- Maternity Leave
-
14WHO International Code of Marketing of
Breast-milk substitutes
- Commonly referred to as the International Code
- Prohibits the promotion of formula in health care
facilities, the distribution of free samples, and
use of pictures idealizing artificial feeding.
15Baby Friendly Hospital Initative
- Goals
- To implement the Ten steps to successful
breastfeeding - To discontinue the marketing of breast-milk
substitutes at hospitals and maternity wards
(ensure compliance with the International Code)
16As of June, 2008 there are 64 Baby-Friendly
Hospitals and Birth Centers in the United States
17Ten steps to successful breastfeeding
- 1. Have a written breastfeeding policy that is
routinely communicated to all health care staff. - 2. Train all health care staff in skills
necessary to implement this policy. - 3. Inform all pregnant women about the benefits
and management of breastfeeding. - 4. Help mothers initiate breastfeeding within a
half-hour of birth. - 5. Show mothers how to breastfeed, and how to
maintain lactation even if they should be
separated from their infants.
18- 6. Give newborn infants no food or drink other
than breast milk, unless medically indicated. - 7. Practice rooming-in allow mothers and
infants to remain together 24 hours a day. - 8. Encourage breastfeeding on demand.
- 9. Give no artificial teats or pacifiers (also
called dummies or soothers) to breastfeeding
infants. - 10. Foster the establishment of breastfeeding
support groups and refer mothers to them on
discharge from the hospital or clinic.
19Hospital Maternity Care Practices
20Description
- Baby-Friendly Hospital Status
- Ten-steps to successful breastfeeding
- Compliance with WHO Intl Code of Marketing of
Breast-milk Substitutes - Structural changes (either as part of BFHI or
stand alone) - Rooming-in allowing mother and baby to room
together 24-hrs/day - Early skin-to-skin contact
- Restrictions on formula marketing
- Breastfeeding guidance soon after delivery
- Combined structural changes
- Training of health professionals
- To increase knowledge of the importance of
breastfeeding - To change professional practice in support of
breastfeeding.
21Evidence-based practices
- Structural changes in hospital practices can be
effective at increasing the initiation and
duration of breastfeeding. - Evidence-based practices include
- Baby-friendly initiatives (10 steps
implementation) - Structural changes (as part of BFHI or
stand-alone) - Early skin-to-skin contact
- Rooming-in
- Breastfeeding guidance soon after delivery
- Especially for primiparas
- Combined structural changes most effective
- Limiting formula marketing and commercial
discharge packets - Overall, evidence suggests that commercial
discharge packets negatively affect exclusive
breastfeeding - Adverse effect on duration among women who are
not sure of their intentions to continue
breastfeeding - Further research is needed to assess its impact
on initiation and duration
22Promising Practices
- Training of health care professionals
- Most studies have methodological limitations
- Statistical significance not provided
- Incomplete information about content of training
- Further research is needed to determine best
practices related to training health care
professionals to provide effective breastfeeding
support - Bottom-line
- No evidence that training of HC professionals
alone directly effects breastfeeding initiation
or duration - Yet, training is a pre-requisite for the success
of other breastfeeding interventions - For example Healthy Start initiatives home
visits hospital and maternity care practices
lactation support services
23Workplace Support
24Rationale
- 70 of employed mothers who have children under 3
years of age work full-time. - African American women are more likely to return
to work earlier and be employed in a workplace
that is not supportive of breastfeeding. -
25Description
- Workplace support
- Flexible work policies
- Paid maternity leave
- Flexible work hours
- Environment that encourages breastfeeding
- Facilities that enable mothers to continue to
breastfeed or store milk for later feeding
(private rooms, refrigeration)
26Evidence of effectiveness
- No trials have evaluated the effectiveness of
workplace interventions in promoting
breastfeeding among women returning to paid work
after the birth of their child. - Cochrane Review, 2008
27Recommendations from the DHHS Office on Womens
Health
- The workplace environment should enable mothers
to continue breastfeeding as long as the mother
and baby desire.
28Breastfeeding Support
- Professional Support
- Peer Counseling
-
29Description
- Breastfeeding support consists of education about
technique and feeding, as well as psychological
support. - Lactation consultants
- One-on-one support in hospitals and clinic
- Home visits
- Telephone support
- Peer counseling
30Rationale
- In communities where breastfeeding is the norm,
new mothers may have plenty of exposure to
breastfeeding. - In the United States, many mothers have not had
this exposure, especially new mothers. - Breastfeeding support can offer mothers
- Attachment and positioning techniques
- Education about exclusive and unrestricted
breastfeeding - Assistance in interpreting their babys behavior
- Confidence in their ability to breastfeed
31Evidence-based practices
- Breastfeeding support interventions, alone, may
increase breastfeeding duration, but do not
significantly effect initiation. - Interventions that combine education and support
are more effective than support alone.
32- Peer support programs were found to be effective
at increasing breastfeeding initiation and
duration rates among - Women on low incomes
- Women who expressed an interest in breastfeeding
and requested a peer counselor. - Multifaceted interventions with peer support as
a key component are effective at increasing both
initiation and duration
33- Evidence suggests that support is most effective
when offered to women soon after birth, without
them having to request it.
34La Leche League
Group peer support Peer counseling Telephone
counseling Home visits
35Limited effectiveness
- Professional social support alone, without
educational components was not found to
significantly increase initiation rates.
36Education
37Description
- Prenatal, intrapartum, and postnatal education to
increase the knowledge and self-efficacy of
mothers - Breastfeeding classes
- Small-group classes
- One-on-one sessions
- Breastfeeding literature and written materials
- Generally conducted by lactation specialists or
nurses during prenatal sessions
38Evidence-based interventions
- Education on breastfeeding found to be the most
effective stand-alone intervention for increasing
the initiation and short-term duration of
breastfeeding. - Breastfeeding education most effective among
disadvantaged populations with low rates of
breastfeeding. - Prenatal health education classes delivered in
small groups or one-to-one can be effective at
increasing initiation and duration rates
39Promising practices
- Individual breastfeeding guidance and support to
increase self-efficacy may be more effective in
increasing the duration of breastfeeding than
written materials alone.
40Limited Effectiveness
- Non-interactive methods of breastfeeding
education such as written materials have limited
impact on initiation rates when used alone. - No educational interventions were found to
significantly impact duration up to 6 months
41Key Findings
- A combination of interventions is likely to be
more effective than a stand-alone intervention. - Interventions that expand all phases of pregnancy
are more effective than those limited to one
phase.
Prenatal
Intrapartum
Postnatal
Infancy
42Effective Intervention Packages
- Intervention packages that include a
combination of the following components are
usually most effective
43Recommendations
- The best way to develop an effective intervention
is to - Combine interventions
- Support breastfeeding before, during, and after
pregnancy.
44References
- Abdulwadud, O. A., Snow, M. E. (2007).
Interventions in the workplace to support
breastfeeding for women in employment. Cochrane
Database Syst Rev(3), CD006177. - Anderson, G. C., Moore, E., Hepworth, J.,
Bergman, N. (2003). Early skin-to-skin contact
for mothers and their healthy newborn infants.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev(2), CD003519. - Britton, C., McCormick, F. M., Renfrew, M. J.,
Wade, A., King, S. E. (2007). Support for
breastfeeding mothers. Cochrane Database Syst
Rev(1), CD001141. - Fairbank, L., O'Meara, S., Renfrew, M. J.,
Woolridge, M., Sowden, A. J., Lister-Sharp, D.
(2000). A systematic review to evaluate the
effectiveness of interventions to promote the
initiation of breastfeeding. Health Technol
Assess, 4(25), 1-171. - Futuro, E. (2006). BFHI USA. Retrieved July 1,
2008, from http//www.babyfriendlyusa.org/ - Gagnon, A. J. (2000). Individual or group
antenatal education for childbirth/parenthood.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev(4), CD002869. - Guise, J. M., Palda, V., Westhoff, C., Chan, B.
K., Helfand, M., Lieu, T. A. (2003). The
effectiveness of primary care-based interventions
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L., McCormick, F., Spiby, H. (2005). The
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r. Retrieved June 7, 2008. from www.nice.org.uk. - Satcher, D. S. (2001). DHHS blueprint for action
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45- No single intervention or group can succeed in
meeting the challenge implementing the strategy
thus calls for increased political will, public
investment, awareness among health workers,
involvement of families and communities, and
collaboration between governments, - international organizations and other concerned
parties that will ultimately ensure that all
necessary action is taken. - -- World Health Organization, 2003