OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a single one-to-one in-hospital education session could increase the rate of breastfeeding at 17 weeks. DESIGN: A prospective, randomised, parallel group, open trial. SETTING:A level two maternity hospital in France. SAMPLE: Breastfeeding mothers who were employed outside the home prenatally and were delivered of a healthy singleton. INTERVENTION: A structured one-to-one in-hospital education session. METHODS:One hundred and six mother-infant pairs were allocated to the intervention group and 104 to the control group (receiving usual verbal encouragement). A total of 93 mother-infant pairs in the intervention group and 97 in the control group provided complete data for final evaluation of efficacy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Rate of breastfeeding at infant age of 17 weeks. RESULTS: There was no significant difference between the two groups in the rate of any breastfeeding (34.4% in the intervention group vs 40.2% in the control group, relative risk = 0.86 [0.52-1.40]), and in the rate of exclusive breastfeeding (14.0% in the intervention group vs 14.4% in the control group, relative risk = 0.97 [0.42-2.22]). CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that a single in-hospital educational intervention has no effect on the breastfeeding rate at four months. Guidance provided by maternity staff should be reinforced by a long term multifaceted support programme in countries with a low to intermediate rate of breastfeeding.
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether a single one-to-one in-hospital education session could increase the rate of breastfeeding at 17 weeks. DESIGN: A prospective, randomised, parallel group, open trial. SETTING: A level two maternity hospital in France. SAMPLE: Breastfeeding mothers who were employed outside the home prenatally and were delivered of a healthy singleton. INTERVENTION: A structured one-to-one in-hospital education session. METHODS: One hundred and six mother-infant pairs were allocated to the intervention group and 104 to the control group (receiving usual verbal encouragement). A total of 93 mother-infant pairs in the intervention group and 97 in the control group provided complete data for final evaluation of efficacy. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Rate of breastfeeding at infant age of 17 weeks. RESULTS: There was no significant difference between the two groups in the rate of any breastfeeding (34.4% in the intervention group vs 40.2% in the control group, relative risk = 0.86 [0.52-1.40]), and in the rate of exclusive breastfeeding (14.0% in the intervention group vs 14.4% in the control group, relative risk = 0.97 [0.42-2.22]). CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that a single in-hospital educational intervention has no effect on the breastfeeding rate at four months. Guidance provided by maternity staff should be reinforced by a long term multifaceted support programme in countries with a low to intermediate rate of breastfeeding.
Authors: Alison McFadden; Anna Gavine; Mary J Renfrew; Angela Wade; Phyll Buchanan; Jane L Taylor; Emma Veitch; Anne Marie Rennie; Susan A Crowther; Sara Neiman; Stephen MacGillivray Journal: Cochrane Database Syst Rev Date: 2017-02-28
Authors: Jacqueline C Kent; Elizabeth Ashton; Catherine M Hardwick; Marnie K Rowan; Elisa S Chia; Kyle A Fairclough; Lalitha L Menon; Courtney Scott; Georgia Mather-McCaw; Katherine Navarro; Donna T Geddes Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2015-09-29 Impact factor: 3.390