Let’s Talk About Breastfeeding: The Importance of Delivering a Message in a Home Visiting Program

Purpose: To examine the potential impact of paraprofessional home visitors in promoting breastfeeding initiation and continuation among a high-risk population. Design: A secondary analysis of program data from a statewide home visitation program. Setting: Thirty-six Healthy Families New York sites a...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of health promotion 2018-05, Vol.32 (4), p.989-996
Hauptverfasser: McGinnis, Sandra, Lee, Eunju, Kirkland, Kristen, Miranda-Julian, Claudia, Greene, Rose
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container_end_page 996
container_issue 4
container_start_page 989
container_title American journal of health promotion
container_volume 32
creator McGinnis, Sandra
Lee, Eunju
Kirkland, Kristen
Miranda-Julian, Claudia
Greene, Rose
description Purpose: To examine the potential impact of paraprofessional home visitors in promoting breastfeeding initiation and continuation among a high-risk population. Design: A secondary analysis of program data from a statewide home visitation program. Setting: Thirty-six Healthy Families New York sites across New York State. Subjects: A total of 3521 pregnant mothers at risk of poor child health and developmental outcomes. Intervention: Home visitors deliver a multifaceted intervention that includes educating high-risk mothers on benefits of breastfeeding, encouraging them to breastfeed and supporting their efforts during prenatal and postnatal periods. Measures: Home visitor-reported content and frequency of home visits, participant-reported breastfeeding initiation and duration, and covariates (Kempe Family Stress Index, race and ethnicity, region, nativity, marital status, age, and education). Analysis: Logistic regression. Results: Breastfeeding initiation increased by 1.5% for each 1-point increase in the percentage of prenatal home visits that included breastfeeding discussions. Breastfeeding continuation during the first 6 months also increased with the percentage of earlier home visits that included breastfeeding discussions. Additionally, if a participant receives 1 more home visit during the third month, her likelihood of breastfeeding at 6 months increases by 11%. Effect sizes varied by months postpartum. Conclusions: Delivering a breastfeeding message consistently during regular home visits is important for increasing breastfeeding rates. Given that home visiting programs target new mothers least likely to breastfeed, a more consistent focus on breastfeeding in this supportive context may reduce breastfeeding disparities.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0890117117723802
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Breastfeeding continuation during the first 6 months also increased with the percentage of earlier home visits that included breastfeeding discussions. Additionally, if a participant receives 1 more home visit during the third month, her likelihood of breastfeeding at 6 months increases by 11%. Effect sizes varied by months postpartum. Conclusions: Delivering a breastfeeding message consistently during regular home visits is important for increasing breastfeeding rates. 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Breastfeeding continuation during the first 6 months also increased with the percentage of earlier home visits that included breastfeeding discussions. Additionally, if a participant receives 1 more home visit during the third month, her likelihood of breastfeeding at 6 months increases by 11%. Effect sizes varied by months postpartum. Conclusions: Delivering a breastfeeding message consistently during regular home visits is important for increasing breastfeeding rates. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); SAGE Complete A-Z List
subjects Breastfeeding & lactation
Domiciliary visits
Ethnicity
Family relations
Health disparities
Health promotion
Health status
Health technology assessment
Health visiting
High risk
Intervention
Marital status
Mothers
Postpartum period
Prenatal care
Race
Visitors
title Let’s Talk About Breastfeeding: The Importance of Delivering a Message in a Home Visiting Program
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