| Literature DB >> 29489841 |
Orit Holtzman1,2, Tim Usherwood1.
Abstract
The aim of this study was to explore the knowledge, attitudes and practices of established general practitioners (GPs) in relation to breastfeeding. 10 GPs in the Australian Nepean Blue Mountains Health District were interviewed and the interviews transcribed and analyzed thematically. Emergent themes from each interview were identified and then compared between and across the 10 interviews. Five themes emerged following the analysis: breastfeeding knowledge and training; attitudes towards breastfeeding; GPs' role in relation to breast feeding; GPs' practices; influence of male gender. All the GPs interviewed had positive attitudes towards breastfeeding, however they were often lacking in knowledge and conviction to be able to provide strong support to women during their breastfeeding journey. Some reported ambivalence in their encouragement of breastfeeding due to their desire to maintain a good relationship with women who chose not to feed this way. Nine of the GPs had little or no formal breastfeeding training and relied mainly on personal experience. Their clinics did not provide formal breastfeeding support including a written breastfeeding friendly policy and most GPs were not proactive in creating such an environment. We hope that the results from this study will assist in developing breastfeeding policies and professional education to support GPs in this role.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29489841 PMCID: PMC5830034 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0191854
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Demographics of sample (N = 10).
| Characteristic | Number or Median (Range) |
|---|---|
| Females | 7 |
| Males | 3 |
| Age (N = 9, see note) | 44 (31–66) years |
| Time in practice (N = 9, see note) | 13 (4–38) years |
Note. Information not provided by one participant.
Fig 1Coding tree.
Themes and subthemes.
| THEMES | SUBTHEMES |
|---|---|
| Breastfeeding knowledge and training | Perception of knowledge |
| Attitudes towards breastfeeding | Supportive attitudes |
| GPs’ role in relation to breastfeeding | Providing support |
| GPs’ practices | Breastfeeding friendly clinics |
| Influence of male gender | Male gender and attitudes |