Background: Breastfeeding rates in Ireland are among the lowest worldwide. A feasibility study of a breastfeeding-support intervention explored maternal characteristics associated with antenatal breastfeeding self-efficacy and with infant-feeding mode at 6 weeks postpartum among women giving birth in Ireland.
Methods: We conducted a prospective study across two sites, urban and rural: The National Maternity Hospital (NMH), Dublin and Wexford General Hospital (WGH), Wexford. Nulliparous, pregnant women were recruited at approximately 32 weeks gestation from the hospitals' antenatal out-patient departments. Participants attended an antenatal class with a support partner, received a one-to-one session with a lactation consultant after delivery and had access to a breastfeeding-support clinic and telephone advice postpartum. Our aim was to understand maternal variables associated with breastfeeding self-efficacy and infant-feeding mode. We explored associations between continuous and categorical variables and any breastfeeding and exclusive breastfeeding using t tests and Chi-squared analyses.
Results: One hundred mothers provided baseline data; 64 provided follow-up data. Lower maternal age and non-Irish nationality were associated with higher antenatal breastfeeding self-efficacy. At the rural unit, mothers with tertiary education were more likely to be exclusively breastfeeding than those with secondary education. Though not statistically significant, more normal-weight mothers from the urban unit were exclusively breastfeeding at 6 weeks than overweight/obese mothers.
Conclusions: Breastfeeding outcomes differed by maternal education. Future interventions should target mothers with lower education and possibly also overweight and obese mothers. Increasing breastfeeding self-efficacy, particularly among older and Irish-born mothers, may be a mechanism for improving breastfeeding outcomes.
Keywords: Breastfeeding; Breastfeeding self-efficacy; Feasibility study; Human milk; Intervention.