Self Efficacy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of an Online Theory-based Educational Programme for Primiparous Women on Improving Breastfeeding Related Outcomes: A Randomised Controlled Trial
Breastmilk is the best food for babies and exclusive breastfeeding is beneficial to mother-baby dyads. It is recommended to exclusively breastfeed babies till 6 months of age and continue with complementary food until aged 2 or above. This proposed study aims to establish and evaluate an effective intervention in sustaining exclusive breastfeeding among primiparous women up to 6 months postpartum.
World Health Organization suggests all infants should be exclusively breastfed for 6 months and continue with complementary food till 2 years old. Yet, the global exclusive breastfeeding rate at 6 months is only around 40%. As for Hong Kong, breastfeeding rate dropped substantially from 87% upon discharge to less than a half at 6 months postpartum and only one-third of women still exclusively breastfed their infants. According to previous studies, women had early breastfeeding initiation or had breastfed their first child for at least 6 months were more likely to exclusively breastfeed the babies for longer time. However, mothers have early weaning easily due to inadequate breastfeeding knowledge/ skills, lack of lactation support or if they have specific characteristics like being hypertensive/ diabetic, primiparous or having complicated birthing experience. It was also found that maternal breastfeeding education, breastfeeding self-efficacy and their intention all affect the initiation and continuation of breastfeeding. Among various promotional interventions, educational and supportive interventions were found to be effectively increased breastfeeding duration, while self-efficacy based intervention improved breastfeeding self-efficacy in the first 2 months but not on exclusive breastfeeding rates at 6 months postpartum. In addition, overall, there are inconsistent effects on educational and supportive interventions on breastfeeding outcomes, especially exclusive breastfeeding rate at 6 months postpartum. Also, most of the previous reviews did not focus on the primiparous women. And it is unclear the intervention effects on breastfeeding self-efficacy and exclusive breastfeeding rate of the first time mothers over 6-months. As a result, a systematic review of 13 randomised controlled trials was done to identify effective approaches to educational and supportive interventions to improve breastfeeding in first time mothers up to at least 6-month postpartum. The result showed educational and supportive interventions were effective in increasing exclusive breastfeeding rate at ≤2 months & 6 months, partial breastfeeding rate as well as breastfeeding self-efficacy at ≤2 months. The key components in breastfeeding promotion interventions, are those involved multicomponent (that is antenatal group education, postnatal individual breastfeeding coaching together with telephone follow-ups), breastfeeding self-efficacy theory-based that delivered across antenatal and postnatal period with ≥ 3 intervention sessions. With the current COVID-19 pandemic, all face-to-face interventions in the hospitals are constrained. So the proposed study will be conducted by using Zoom platform and telephone follow-ups. There are one session of online antenatal breastfeeding talk, 5 times daily online postnatal breastfeeding coaching and 7 times weekly postnatal telephone follow-ups. The intervention will be guided by Dennis's breastfeeding self-efficacy framework. This study aims to determine if a real-time online theory-based education and support plus telephone follow-ups programme (REST) for primiparous women in Hong Kong would increase their exclusive rate, breastfeeding self-efficacy, and other breastfeeding outcomes over 6-month postpartum. ;
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