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Exclusive Breastfeeding clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06286176 Completed - Breast Feeding Clinical Trials

Breastfeeding Promotion in Lebanon Through a Salutogenic Intervention

Start date: November 17, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The study is a randomized control trial to assess the effect of a salutogenic intervention on breastfeeding initiation and duration of exclusive breastfeeding in Lebanon. In this Salutogenic intervention, infant feeding helpers will provide subjects of the intervention group breastfeeding related information , and will support these subjects by counseling and guiding them to find general resistance resources. This aims to increase sense of coherence and its parameters: comprehensibility, manageability and meaningfulness, which are the base of salutogenesis.

NCT ID: NCT05959460 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

Assessing Exclusive Breastfeeding Practice

Start date: January 1, 2016
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This study was a longitudinal design. The questionnaire on exclusive breastfeeding was administered and was validated against the deuterium oxide dose-to-mother technique to assess human milk intake of babies aged 3 and 6 mo.

NCT ID: NCT05944471 Completed - Breast Feeding Clinical Trials

The Effect of Telehealth on Feeding Exclusive Breastfeeding in the Perception of Insufficient Milk

Start date: September 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this [type of study: The study, which was carried out within the framework of mixed method, is a research using an explanatory sequential design, and its quantitative dimension is a randomized controlled experimental design] is to [The aim of this study is to determine the effect of breastfeeding support given to mothers with inadequate milk perception through telehealth application on mothers' giving only breast milk to their babies for the first six months] in [consisting of primiparous mothers, mothers who had normal vaginal deliveries and mothers with perceived inadequate milk, healthy term babies]. The main question[s] it aims to answer are: - [What are the experiences of mothers with insufficient milk perception about the breastfeeding support given to their babies with telehealth application and their mothers' experiences about giving only breast milk to their babies for the first six months? ] - [What is the satisfaction status of mothers with insufficient milk perception towards the breastfeeding support provided by telehealth application? ] Hypotheses of the Study - [H0: Breastfeeding support provided to mothers with insufficient milk perception through telehealth application has no effect on the mother's exclusive breastfeeding in the first six months. ] - [H1: Breastfeeding support provided to mothers with insufficient milk perception through telehealth application has an effect on the mother's exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months.] - [H2: There is a difference between the mean breastfeeding self-efficacy and breastfeeding cessation tendency scale scores of the mothers in the control group and the intervention group with insufficient milk perception.] - [H3: Mothers have a high level of satisfaction with the breastfeeding support provided by telehealth application.] Intervention Group: The Inadequate Milk Perception Scale was applied to determine the mothers who thought that their milk was inadequate by face-to-face interview method before discharge from the hospital after delivery. Mothers with low scale scores were assigned to the control group in the first set and to the intervention group in the second set with the help of Research Randomiser (https://www.randomizer.org/). Then, Personal Information Form-1, Tendency to Discontinue Breastfeeding Scale, and Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy Scale were applied to the mothers. After discharge, training videos on the importance of breast milk and breastfeeding and written documents (e-brochure, prose version of breastfeeding trainings) prepared in line with the literature and explained by experts in accordance with the puerperium week between 10.00-14.00 hours were sent to the mothers individually with telehealth application once a week. At the same time intervals, visualised messages explaining breastfeeding and that breast milk is sufficient for the baby were sent via telehealth application five days a week. In addition, if the mothers requested at 10.00-17.00 on weekdays, they were given live support by the researcher for the issues they were curious about breastfeeding by calling the researcher via telehealth application. The mothers in the intervention group were called via telehealth application between the 2nd-5th postpartum days, 13th-17th days, 38th-40th days, 2nd-3rd months, 4th-5th months and at the end of the 6th month and the relevant forms were applied again (at the time period convenient for the mother). Control Group: The Inadequate Milk Perception Scale was administered to the mothers to determine the mothers who thought that their milk was inadequate by face-to-face interview method before discharge from the hospital after delivery. Then, Personal Information Form-1, Tendency to Discontinue Breastfeeding Scale and Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy Scale were applied to the mothers. The mothers determined as the control group were called by the researcher via telehealth application between the 2nd-5th postpartum days, 13th-17th days, 38th-40th days, 2nd-3rd months, 4th-5th months and at the end of the 6th month by telehealth application and the relevant forms were applied again (at the time period convenient for the mother). No intervention was made to the mothers in the control group, and the woman benefited from routine outpatient clinic services if she requested.

NCT ID: NCT04478682 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

Breastfeeding Support Provided to Mothers Through WhatsApp Messaging Application

Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The research was planned as a randomized controlled experimental study in order to determine the effect of continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application on breastfeeding. Research Hypotheses H0: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application has no effect on breastfeeding. H1: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application increases the rate of exclusive breastfeeding. H2: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application increases the breastfeeding duration of the mothers. H3: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application reduces the rate of mothers giving their babies other foods than breast milk. H4: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application reduces bottle feeding rates. H5: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application reduces the rate of pacifier use. H6: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application reduces the incidence of mothers' breastfeeding problems. H7: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application affects mothers' breastfeeding attitude positively. H8: Continuous breastfeeding support provided to mothers through WhatsApp messaging application increases the motivation of breastfeeding mothers.

NCT ID: NCT04414527 Completed - Anemia Clinical Trials

Effects of Video-based Health Education on Maternal and Child Health in Ethiopia

MCH
Start date: March 13, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Low adherence to recommended health and nutrition strategies during the critical 1000 day-window of opportunity is multifactorial but low quality communication is key limitation. Innovative strategies to improve interpersonal communication can reduce the burden and the fatigue of community health workers and may result in a greater change. The findings of this project will support governments and other stakeholders in their delivery of high impact nutrition and health practices. This intervention aims to improve adherence to ante- and post-natal care practices and recommendations by the use of our video-based health education. These videos will be implemented through home-based counseling by trained assistants, and video-based forum participation led by community nurses and health extension workers (HEWs). During the monthly forums, the educational package will be delivered in a video form - locally prepared using multiple approaches like testimony, comedy, dramas in the form of questions and answers, group discussions and deductive approaches. Cordless projectors and locally created videos give the health community more quality control over the end message, expand the number of people reached, allow for the use of minimally trained non-expert facilitators such as the hews, and allow for contextually appropriate information. They can also be used in areas without access to electricity, helping to bridge the digital divide, and serving as a leapfrog technology for areas that would otherwise not have access to media.

NCT ID: NCT03688217 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

The Philani Mobile Video Intervention for Exclusive Breastfeeding (MOVIE) Study

MOVIE
Start date: November 5, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This cluster-randomized controlled trial seeks to evaluate the impact of a mobile video intervention for exclusive breastfeeding (MOVIE) on the infant feeding practices of mothers living in under-resourced communities in the Western Cape, South Africa. The trial will compare infant feeding practices in two groups of participants, enrolled in the Philani Mentor-Mother Outreach Program, a home-visiting program focused on community-based health promotion through peer-to-peer counseling. The participants in the intervention arm will receive the Philani Intervention Model (PIM), a perinatal health promotion intervention, together with the additional mobile, video intervention for exclusive breastfeeding. The participants in the control arm will receive only the standard PIM. Participants will be exposed to either the intervention or the control condition during pregnancy and the first five months after delivery. The central hypothesis in this trial is that, when compared with the control group, infant feeding practices in the intervention group will be significantly better aligned with current World Health Organization recommendations, after exposure to the Philani MOVIE intervention. The primary outcomes in this study are short-term exclusive breastfeeding, in the first month of life, and long-term exclusive breastfeeding, in the fifth month of life, (based on maternal 24-hour recall). Secondary outcomes include other infant feeding practices, such as early initiation of breastfeeding, any breastfeeding in the first month and in the fifth month of life, bottle-feeding, early introduction of complementary foods in the first month and in the fifth month of life and maternal knowledge in the first month and the fifth month post delivery.

NCT ID: NCT02775552 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

Impact Evaluation of a Multi-Sectoral Community-Based Approach to Improving Infant and Young Child Feeding in Amhara, Ethiopia

A&T-2 Ethiopia
Start date: March 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Alive & Thrive is an initiative that aims to scale up nutrition to save lives, prevent illness, and ensure healthy growth and development through improved infant young child feeding (IYCF) practices. The purpose of this study is to evaluate whether the Alive & Thrive intervention package, consisting of interpersonal communication, community mobilization activities, and radio campaign, can increase complementary feeding practices (minimum dietary diversity and minimum meal frequency) while sustaining exclusive breastfeeding rate among children less than two years of age. The impact evaluation uses a cluster-randomized design where 20 geographic clusters (woredas/districts) were randomized to two study arms - 10 intervention areas and 10 comparison areas. Repeated cross-sectional baseline and endline surveys will be used to assess program impact.

NCT ID: NCT02263118 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

A Mobile-health Pilot Experiment Targeting Mothers With Newborns in Rural Areas of San Juan Sacatepequez, Guatemala

Start date: November 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study was to determine whether exposure to m-health platforms promoting recommended breastfeeding practices was effective in transmitting the exclusive breastfeeding message to participant mothers, and in improving weight evolution of infants.

NCT ID: NCT02221167 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

Rx Milk Study of Donor Milk Supplementation to Improve Breastfeeding Outcomes

Rx Milk
Start date: July 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study is a randomized controlled trial seeking to determine whether supplementing infants at risk for excessive neonatal weight loss with a small volume of human donor milk prophylactically in the first 1-3 days of life, before maternal mature milk production (before mom's milk "comes in") will decrease the incidence of formula use at 1 week and 1, 2, and 3 months of life and increase the rate of exclusive breastfeeding in this high-risk population. We hypothesize that supplementation of term infants who have lost greater than or equal to 5% birth weight by 36 hours of age with a small volume of donor breast milk following feeds, until mature milk production, will result in decreased supplemental formula use at 1 week and increased exclusive as well as any breastfeeding at 1 week and 1, 2, and 3 months. This study's specific aims are to compare the effectiveness of encouraging in-hospital exclusive breastfeeding with offering early small-volume donor milk supplementation in a population of infants at risk for excessive neonatal weight loss with goals of 1) decreasing the incidence of formula supplementation at 1 week of life and 2) improving breastfeeding duration.

NCT ID: NCT01869920 Completed - Clinical trials for Exclusive Breastfeeding

Effectiveness of an Educational Intervention to Maintain Exclusive Breastfeeding

PROLACT
Start date: February 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Hypothesis: An educational intervention increases the proportion of mother-infant pairs using exclusive breastfeeding