Increasing Breastfeeding Duration and Exclusivity in a Sample of Rural Women: A Pilot Study
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
5-15-2017
Publication Title
Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association
DOI
10.21633/jgpha.6.305
ISSN
2471-9773
Abstract
Background: Increasing breastfeeding exclusivity and duration is an objective of Maternal and Child Health (MICH-21.4 and 21.5) of the Healthy People 2020 initiative. Breastfeeding rates differ considerably between high-income and low-income women.
Methods: This was a pilot project conducted to assess the feasibility of an intervention to increase breastfeeding practices overall and to improve exclusive breastfeeding rates among a sample of rural women enrolled in the Special, Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants and Children (WIC) in a rural Georgia county. Participants were recruited from the local regional hospital (n=27). Support group meetings were offered over a four-week period and began within five days of birth. At each meeting, data were gathered on demographic characteristics, pacifier use, initiation of cup feeding, and rates of breastfeeding duration and exclusivity.
Results: More than 60% of the participants breastfed exclusively for the first week, but by the end of the fourth week, that number dropped to under 45%.
Conclusions: Low-income women continue to be among the most challenging group in which to improve breastfeeding duration and exclusivity rates. Public health programs need to create innovative ways in which to improve breastfeeding rates. Lessons learned from the pilot study are described and suggestions for future study are provided.
Recommended Citation
Chopak-Foss, Joanne, Felicia Yeboah.
2017.
"Increasing Breastfeeding Duration and Exclusivity in a Sample of Rural Women: A Pilot Study."
Journal of the Georgia Public Health Association, 6 (3): 337-341: Georgia Southern University Press.
doi: 10.21633/jgpha.6.305
https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/hpmb-facpubs/45
Copyright
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.