| Literature DB >> 29573123 |
S Lyons1, S Currie2, S Peters1, T Lavender3, D M Smith4.
Abstract
Breastfeeding can play a key role in the reduction of obesity, but initiation and maintenance rates in women with a body mass index (BMI) of ≥30 kg m-2 are low. Psychological factors influence breastfeeding behaviours in the general population, but their role is not yet understood in women with a BMI ≥30 kg m-2 . Therefore, this review aimed to systematically search and synthesize the literature, which has investigated the association between any psychological factor and breastfeeding behaviour in women with a BMI ≥30 kg m-2 . The search identified 20 eligible papers, reporting 16 psychological factors. Five psychological factors were associated with breastfeeding behaviours: intentions to breastfeed, belief in breast milk's nutritional adequacy and sufficiency, belief about other's infant feeding preferences, body image and social knowledge. It is therefore recommended that current care should encourage women to plan to breastfeed, provide corrective information for particular beliefs and address their body image and social knowledge. Recommendations for future research include further exploration of several psychological factors (i.e. expecting that breastfeeding will enhance weight loss, depression, anxiety and stress) and evidence and theory-based intervention development.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; obesity; psychological factors; women with a BMI ≥30 kg m−2
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29573123 PMCID: PMC6849588 DOI: 10.1111/obr.12681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obes Rev ISSN: 1467-7881 Impact factor: 9.213
Inclusion criteria
| PICO reference | Inclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Population | Pre‐pregnancy BMI ≥30 kg m−2 |
| Live birth | |
| Opportunity to initiate/maintain breastfeeding | |
| Intervention | Not used |
| Comparison | Not used |
| Outcome | Psychological factors (measured quantitatively) |
| Study | Prospective |
| Cross‐sectional | |
| Intervention |
BMI, body mass index.
Keywords for each search term
| PICO reference | Term | Keywords |
|---|---|---|
| P | Breastfeeding | Breastfe |
| BMI ≥30 kg m−2 | Obes | |
| O | Psychological factors | psychosocial factors, psychological, social, social norms, social support, psychosocial support, self‐efficacy, expectations, education, health education, well being, wellbeing, psychological well‐being, body image, confidence, self‐confidence, knowledge, health knowledge, motivation, views, self‐esteem, self‐perception, attitudes, beliefs, postpartum depression, anxiety, stress, psychological stress, social acceptance and social influence |
Represents truncation.
BMI, body mass index.
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic review and meta‐analysis flow diagram of study selection. BMI, body mass index; CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature.
Study characteristics of 20 included studies
| Reference | Country | Sample | Design | Psychological factor(s) | Breastfeeding behaviour(s) | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bartok | USA | Women birthing at medical centre | Cohort | Planned duration and general beliefs about BF | Duration | 32 |
| Bogen | USA | Pregnant women volunteers | Observational | Planned IF method | Initiation and duration | 34 |
| Chapman | USA | Pregnant women attending prenatal clinic | RCT | Confidence in ability to BF | Initiation and duration | 32 |
| Cordero | USA | Mothers of macrosomic infants born at a hospital | Cohort | Planned IF method | Initiation | 23 |
| Guelinckx | Belgium | Women birthing at a hospital | Cohort | Planned IF method, belief in breast milk's nutritional adequacy and sufficiency | Initiation and duration | 29 |
| Hauff | USA | Pregnant women volunteers | Cohort | Planned IF method, planned duration, general beliefs about BF, belief about others' IF preferences, confidence in ability to BF and social knowledge | Initiation and duration | 32 |
| Hilson | USA | Pregnant women in hospital database | Observational | Planned duration, general beliefs about BF, body image, confidence in ability to BF, factual knowledge and social knowledge | Duration | 30 |
| Jarlenski | USA | Pregnant women volunteers | Cohort | Planned IF method, general beliefs about BF, belief about others' IF preferences, body image, confidence in ability to BF, BF in social environments, factual knowledge and social knowledge | Initiation and duration | 31 |
| Kair | USA | Women birthing at one of three hospitals | Cohort | General beliefs about BF, belief about others' IF preferences, belief in breast milk's nutritional adequacy and sufficiency | Duration | 35 |
| Krause | USA | Women attending one of three obstetric clinics and volunteers | Observational | Expected outcomes of BF for weight and depressive symptoms | Initiation, duration and intensity | 28 |
| Masho | USA | Women birthing in a hospital | Cohort | Depressive symptoms and stress | Initiation | 32 |
| Mehta | USA | Pregnant women attending a hospital | Cohort | Depressive symptoms, stress and anxiety | Initiation and duration | 32 |
| Mok | France | Women birthing at a hospital | Case–control | Belief in breast milk's nutritional adequacy and sufficiency and BF in social environments | Initiation and duration | 31 |
| Newby | Australia | Pregnant women attending a public event for families | Cohort | Planned IF method, planned duration, confidence in ability to BF and BF in social environments | Duration | 31 |
| Ng | Australia | Women birthing at one of three hospitals | Cohort | Psychological distress | Duration | 32 |
| O'Sullivan | USA | Pregnant women volunteers | Cohort | Planned duration, general beliefs about BF, belief about others' IF preferences, confidence in ability to BF and social knowledge | Duration | 32 |
| Swanson | Scotland | Women birthing at a hospital | Cohort | Body image, psychological distress | BF status | 34 |
| Visram | Canada | Women birthing in one of four hospitals | Cohort | Planned IF method | BF status | 32 |
| Zanardo | Italy | Pregnant women attending a tertiary medical centre | Case–control | Body image | BF at discharge and cessation | 28 |
| Zanardo | Italy | Pregnant women attending a tertiary medical centre | Case–control | Eating disorder symptoms | BF at discharge and cessation | 28 |
Quality score out of a possible 36.
BF, breastfeed/ing; IF, infant feeding; RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Descriptions of how psychological factors were measured
| Psychological factors | Measures |
|---|---|
| Intentions to breastfeed | |
| Planned infant feeding method | Self‐reported infant feeding plan (e.g. breastfeeding, formula and mixed) |
| Planned breastfeeding duration | Self‐reported in months, either as a continuous variable |
| Expectations and beliefs about breastfeeding | |
| General beliefs about breastfeeding | Breastfeeding importance rating |
| Belief in breast milk's nutritional adequacy and sufficiency | Reason for noninitiation or cessation |
| Belief about others' infant feeding preferences | Scale scores of others' opinions |
| Expected outcomes of breastfeeding for weight | Scale score of strength of belief |
| Maternal confidence | |
| Confidence in ability to breastfeed | Scale score of confidence to meet planned duration |
| Breastfeeding in social environments | Scale score of ‘comfortableness in the presence of different groups or in different environments’ |
| Psychological well‐being | |
| Body image | Scale score of satisfaction with appearance |
| Depressive symptoms | Presence of symptoms in yes/no format |
| Stress | Number of stressful life events |
| Anxiety | State–Trait Anxiety Inventory |
| Psychological distress | Kessler‐6 Psychological Distress Scale |
| Eating disorder symptoms | Eating Disorders Inventory‐2 |
| Breastfeeding knowledge | |
| Factual knowledge | True or false questions score |
| Social knowledge | Totalled number of relatives/friends who had breastfed |
BF, breastfeed/ing; WHO, World Health Organization.