| Literature DB >> 35324564 |
Antonio Hernández-Martínez1, José Miguel Quirós-García2, Francisco José García-Sanchez3, Miguel Ángel Puebla-Martín4, David Rodríguez-Almagro2, Julián Rodríguez-Almagro1.
Abstract
To describe the experiences and expectations of Spanish women regarding breastfeeding and the support they receive from healthcare professionals, family, and friends during the breastfeeding journey, A qualitative study using an empirical-phenomenological approach was conducted. Primiparous women that had already given birth were interviewed using a purposive and snowball sampling. In-depth interviews were conducted between 1 January and 30 April 2020. The interviews were transcribed verbatim and analysed using Haase's adaptation of Colaizzi's phenomenological method. We recruited 14 women who had recently become mothers. Three major themes describing experiences of infant feeding by maternal lactation were identified-institutional influences, establishing breastfeeding, and cessation of breastfeeding-as well as the following 10 categories: hospital routines, lactation concerns (amount and infant nutrition), antenatal breastfeeding decision, embarrassment to breastfeed, and normalisation of breastfeeding. Prior education and support were identified as key elements in possible breastfeeding support strategies.Entities:
Keywords: breastfeeding; nurse; nursing; primiparous women; support healthcare professionals
Year: 2022 PMID: 35324564 PMCID: PMC8950364 DOI: 10.3390/nursrep12010018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Rep ISSN: 2039-439X
Participant characteristics.
| Age (Years) | Civil Status | Duration of Breastfeeding | Primiparous | Employment Status | Education Level | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mother 1 | 21 | Single | 1 month | Primiparous | Employeed | University |
| Mother 2 | 24 | Single | 15 days | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
| Mother 3 | 23 | Married | 3 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
| Mother 4 | 22 | Single | 2 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | Secondary |
| Mother 5 | 30 | Married | 6 months | Primiparous | Employeed | University |
| Mother 6 | 21 | Married | 1 year | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
| Mother 7 | 24 | Married | 7 months | Primiparous | Employeed | University |
| Mother 8 | 23 | Married | 5 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
| Mother 9 | 35 | Married | 4 months | Primiparous | Employeed | Secondary |
| Mother 10 | 26 | Single | 8 months | Primiparous | Employeed | Secondary |
| Mother 11 | 22 | Married | 2 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | Secondary |
| Mother 12 | 23 | Married | 4 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
| Mother 13 | 21 | Single | 3 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
| Mother 14 | 22 | Married | 5 months | Primiparous | Unemployed | University |
Theme clusters and theme categories.
|
|
| a. Hospital routines |
| b. Separation of babies |
| c. Encouragement of breastfeeding by healthcare professionals |
|
|
| a. Worry about correct latch |
| b. Sufficient human milk |
| c. Correct nutrition through exclusive breastfeeding |
|
|
| a. The choice to breastfeed during the antenatal period |
| b. Overcome embarrassment |
| c. Negative attitudes of other people |
| d. Normalisation of breastfeeding |