| Literature DB >> 30249216 |
Pasyodun Koralage Buddhika Mahesh1, Moraendage Wasantha Gunathunga2, Suriyakumara Mahendra Arnold3, Chintha Jayasinghe4, Sisira Pathirana5, Mohamed Fahmy Makarim6, Pradeep Malaka Manawadu6, Sameera Jayan Senanayake7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Further research gaps exist in relation to the promotion of breastfeeding. Robust scientific evidence obtained by a meta-analysis would provide objectively summarized data while enabling the assessment of consistency of findings. This review includes the first documented meta-analysis done on the effectiveness of targeting fathers for promoting breastfeeding (BF). Assessments have been done for a primary outcome and for six more secondary outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Breastfeeding promotion; Exclusive breastfeeding; Fathers’ influence on breastfeeding; Infant nutrition; Partner support in breastfeeding
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30249216 PMCID: PMC6154400 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-6037-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Flow-diagram on the selection of studies
Extracted variables from selected studies
| Population | Intervention | Comparison | Outcome | Study design |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| -Eligibility criteria | -Kind of intervention/s done with duration/s | -Number of arms | -Primary and secondary outcomes | -Type of design |
Summary of Findings (SoF) Table
| Effectiveness of targeting fathers for breast feeding promotion | ||||||
| P - Expectant and new fathers | ||||||
| Outcomes | Assumed riska | Corresponding riskb | Relative effect | No. of participants (studies) | Quality of evidence GRADE | Comments |
| Exclusive BF for six months | 201 per 1000 | 411 per 1000 (318 to 534) | RR = 2.04 (1.58–2.65) | 587 [ | Moderatec | Meta-analysis done |
| EBF for four months | 194 per 1000 | 294 per 1000 (221 to 393) | RR = 1.52 (1.14 to 2.03) | 507 [ | Lowd | Meta-analysis done |
| Full formula feeding within two months | 247 per1000 | 170 per 1000 (128 to 230) | RR = 0.69 (0.52 to 0.93) | 721 [ | Moderatee | Meta-analysis done |
| Support of the father | 548 per 1000 | 783 per 1000 (668 to 920) | RR = 1.43f (1.22 to 1.68) | 383 [ | Highg | Meta-analysis done for two studies [ |
| In the third study (Su 2016), fathers in the intervention group knew how to support continuation of breast feeding. When a breastfeeding related problem occurred, they provided solid support. The fathers in the control group did not know how to support even if they wanted to. | ||||||
| Knowledge of the mothers on breast feeding (BKS scale and a developed tool) | In one study (Su 2016), mothers’ knowledge on breastfeeding increased by 19.75 points in the experimental group and by 14.81 in the control group ( | 169 [ | Moderateh | Narrative synthesis done | ||
| Breast feeding related problems | 179 per 1000 | 43 per 1000 (18 to 102) | RR = 0.24 (0.10 to 0.57) | 280 [ | Highi | Narrative synthesis done |
| Maternal attitudes towards breast feeding (IIFAS scale) | The increase of maternal attitudes towards breastfeeding was significantly more in the intervention group ( | 69 [ | Moderatej | Narrative synthesis done | ||
aTotal events divided by the total participants in the control group
bFunction of “assumed risk” and the “relative effect”
cQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (2 points) and upgraded for large effect (1 point)
dQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (2 points)
eQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (1 points)
fMeta-analysis was done for findings of two studies as the third was heterogeneous
gQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (1 points) and upgraded for large effect (1 point)
hQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (2 points) and upgraded for large effect (1 point)
iQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (1 points) and upgraded for large effect (1 point)
jQuality was downgraded due to risk of bias (2 points) and upgraded for large effect (1 point)
Fig. 2Risk of bias summary of individual studies
Characteristics of the selected studies for the meta-analysis of the primary outcome
| Study | Study | Population | Comparison | Intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.Ozlusus, 2014 [ | Turkey, Experimental study | -Ability to read, write and speak Turkish | 1. Control group (No intervention) with 39 families | Education manuals, demonstrations. Fathers’ education done during visiting hours (from the day mother got admitted until the day of discharge) | -Exclusive breast feeding: Control- 12.8%, Group I- 33.3%, Group II- 56.4 |
| 2. Pisacane, 2005 [ | Italy, A controlled trial | Parent-pairs of healthy, term normal birth weight infants. unmarried women, | 1. Intervention group - 280 participants (140 mothers and 140 fathers) | Intervention included a face-to-face 40 minute session on infant feeding, difficulties in breast feeding including their management. A leaflet given at the end. | -Full Breast feeding at six months: Intervention group-25%, Control- 15% |
| 3. Sahip, 2007 [ | Turkey Interventional study. | Expectant fathers attending the workplaces in which a trained physician was available consisted the intervention group. | 1.Intervention, 80 | Six sessions each of 3-4 hours. A certificate to hang on newborn babies’ room. | -Full Breast feeding at six months: Intervention group-62.5%, Control- 23.7% |
| 4. Su, 2016 [ | China, Quasi-experimental study | Participants fluent in Mandarin, more than 20 years, first pregnancy, singleton fetus, couple living together, gestational age more than 39 weeks | -Intervention group with 36 pregnant mother-husband pairs | 60-90 minute health education sessions using power-point presentations and models | -Full Breast feeding at six months: Intervention group- 14 of 35 (40%), control group-6 of 34(17.6%) |
Fig. 3Forest-plot with fixed-model assumption for the primary outcome
Fig. 4Funnel plot of the studies used in meta-analysis of the primary outcome
Sensitivity and sub group analysis of the pooled estimate of primary outcome
| Heterogeneity | Number | Risk Ratio | Confidence Interval | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| With fixed-model assumption (four studies) | I2 value- 0% | 587 | 2.04 | 1.58 to 2.65 |
| With random-model assumption (four studies) | I2 value- 0% | 587 | 2.04 | 1.57 to 2.65 |
| Fixed-model assumption with Ozlusus 2014 removed | I2 value- 0% | 509 | 2.14 | 1.59 to 2.89 |
| Random-model assumption with Ozlusus 2014 removed | I2 value- 0% | 509 | 2.17 | 1.61 to 2.93 |
| Fixed-model assumption with Pisacane 2005 removed | I2 value- 0% | 307 | 2.25 | 1.66 to 3.07 |
| Random-model assumption with Pisacane 2005 removed | I2 value- 0% | 307 | 2.21 | 1.63 to 3.01 |
| Fixed-model assumption with Sahip 2007 removed | I2 value- 0% | 427 | 1.77 | 1.27 to 2.46 |
| Random-model assumption with Sahip 2007 removed | I2 value- 20% | 427 | 1.76 | 1.27 to 2.44 |
| Fixed-model assumption with Su 2016 removed | I2 value- 0% | 518 | 2.02 | 1.53 to 2.66 |
| Random-model assumption with Su 2016 removed | I2 value- 0% | 518 | 2.00 | 1.47 to 2.73 |
Characteristics of the selected studies for the meta-analysis of the secondary outcomes
| Study | Study | Population | Comparison | Intervention | Selected outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Abbass-Dick 2015 [ | Canada, Randomized controlled trial | Primiparous mothers with a singleton birth, 18 or more years old, term delivery, with a male partner | 1. Intervention group (107 couples) | Face to face intervention of approximately 15 minutes. Could refer to materials like workbook, video and a website later | -Support of fathers: Intervention group- 71%, Control group- 52% |
| 2. Raeisi 2014 [ | Iran, Interventional study | Mother in second trimester, no pregnancy complication or underlying disease | 1. Intervention group (Group A) – 50 couples | Three training sessions including brochures | -Support of fathers: |
| 3. Maycock 2013 [ | Australia Randomized controlled trial | Mother must be more than 18 years, father must be contactable living in Western Australia and willing to involve in child rearing | 1. Intervention group- 358 | Two hour antenatal health education session and a postnatal social support package including printed materials. | -Full formula feeding at six weeks: Intervention group-18.4%, Control- 24.8% |
| 4. Susin 2008 [ | Brazil, Controlled clinical trial | Couples living in the city of Porto Alegre, infants have no health problems, birth weight equal to or more than 2500 g, have initiated breastfeeding | -Control group (no intervention)- 201 | Health education session with a 18-minute video and a discussion, an explanatory handout was provided | -EBF at four months: Intervention group with mothers- 11.1%, Intervention group with both mother and father-16.5% |