| Literature DB >> 27980605 |
Maria E Sundaram1, Hasmot Ali2, Sucheta Mehra3, Abu Ahmed Shamim4, Barkat Ullah5, Mahbubur Rashid2, Saijuddin Shaikh2, Parul Christian3, Rolf D W Klemm3, Keith P West3, Alain Labrique3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early and exclusive breastfeeding may improve neonatal survival in low resource settings, but suboptimal breastfeeding still exists in areas with high infant mortality. Prelacteal feeding, the practice of giving a non-breastmilk food as a neonate's first food, has been associated with suboptimal breastfeeding practices. We examined the association of feeding a non-breastmilk food in the first three days of life (early neonatal food, or ENF) with time from birth to initiation of breastfeeding among 25,286 Bangladeshi mother-neonate pairs, in a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial in northwestern rural Bangladesh conducted from 2001-2007.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Early newborn food; Neonatal health; Prelacteal; South Asia
Year: 2016 PMID: 27980605 PMCID: PMC5143457 DOI: 10.1186/s13006-016-0090-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Breastfeed J ISSN: 1746-4358 Impact factor: 3.461
Fig. 1Flow chart of individuals included and excluded from the current analysis
Descriptive characteristics of neonates and mothers in the study area (n = 25,286)
| Characteristic | Total: |
|---|---|
| Maternal age, years: mean ± SD | 21.9 ± 5.7 |
| Primigravid: | 9,493 (37.5) |
| Wealth index: mean ± SD | 0.01 ± 1.0 |
| Maternal literacy: | 12,002 (47.5) |
| Female child gender: | 12,574 (49.7) |
| Perceived child size at birtha: | |
| Small | 6,071 (24.0) |
| Normal | 9,449 (37.4) |
| Large | 9,766 (38.6) |
| Fed early newborn food (ENF) | 22,648 (89.6) |
| Colostrum fed: | 24,071 (95.2) |
| Difficulty suckling at birth: | 7,466 (29.5) |
| Hours to breastfeeding initiation: mean ± SD | 30.6 ± 27.9 |
| Location of birth | |
| At home | 23,680 (93.7) |
| At a family welfare visitor’s house | 277 (1.1) |
| Clinic/hospital | 670 (2.7) |
| Enroute, other, or don’t know | 652 (2.6) |
| Baby delivered by Caesarean section | 457 (1.8) |
| Birth attendant type: | |
| No one present | 389 (1.5) |
| Friend/neighbor/relative | 18,199 (72.0) |
| Traditional birth attendant | 5,716 (22.6) |
| Health care professional | 970 (3.8) |
| Other | 4 (<0.1) |
aPerceived by mother
Fig. 2Reverse cumulative distribution curves illustrating time to breastfeeding and proportion of mothers feeding at that time, by neonate’s ability to breastfeed and feeding early newborn foods (ENF)
Risk factors associated with time to breastfeeding initiation (in hours) in univariable and multivariable linear regression analysis, stratified by ability to breastfeed at birtha
| Characteristic | β (hours to breastfeeding initiation) (unadjusted) | 95% CI | β (hours to breastfeeding initiation) (adjusted)b | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Not able to breastfeed at birth | ||||
| Early newborn food fed | 36.47 | 32.40, 40.54 | 37.36 | 33.26, 41.46 |
| Able to breastfeed at birth | ||||
| Early newborn food fed | 14.07 | 13.43, 14.70 | 13.33 | 12.69, 13.97 |
aCoefficients described in the table are interpreted as additional hours to breastfeeding from the average. Numbers above 0 indicate a delay in breastfeeding compared to the average
bAdjusted model adjusts for best-guess gestational age, wealth index, maternal and child vitality scores, child sex, maternal age, child size at birth (as perceived by the mother), primigravid status, maternal literacy, whether a C-section was performed at the birth, the location of the birth, and the type of birth attendant present