AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess the link between maternal well-being during pregnancy and breastfeeding practices, particularly focusing on how low mood might affect breastfeeding.
  • It analyzed data from 610 women in Dublin, examining factors like education, BMI, and self-reported well-being scores, finding that higher well-being scores correlated with exclusive breastfeeding in initial analyses.
  • However, after adjusting for confounding factors like age and education, the association was no longer significant, indicating that low mood didn't seem to hinder breastfeeding initiation or duration.

Article Abstract

Objective: Low mood is common during the perinatal period, which may negatively impact breastfeeding practices. Exploring predictors of successful breastfeeding is a health priority area. This study investigated if maternal well-being during pregnancy is associated with breastfeeding practices.

Study Design: This is a secondary analysis of a randomized control trial of a low glycemic index diet in pregnancy. A total of 610 secundigravida women were recruited in the National Maternity Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. Data on maternal education attainment, early pregnancy body mass index (BMI), and age were collected from hospital records. Well-being was self-reported by mothers between 10 and 28 weeks' gestation using the World Health Organization 5-Item well-being index. Scores were transformed to give percentage well-being. Mothers recorded breastfeeding practices at hospital discharge and at the study follow-up appointments. Chi-squares and independent -tests determined initial differences in breastfeeding practices. Multiple and logistic regression analyses were used to adjust for confounders.

Results: Average maternal age was 32.7 years; average BMI was 26.6 kg/m, and 56% had achieved third-level education. The average well-being score was 58.2%. In unadjusted analysis, high well-being scores were associated with exclusive breastfeeding (56.2% breastfed vs. 46%, breastfed  < 0.03). After adjusted analysis, these associations were no longer significant (odds ratio: 1.00, 95% confidence interval: 0.99-1.01). No other associations were found.

Conclusion: Our findings indicated 25% of pregnant women in the first trimester reported low well-being scores. Associations between maternal well-being and breastfeeding patterns were explained by maternal age and education level, suggesting low mood may not be a barrier to breastfeeding initiation or duration. This trial is registered at: https://www.isrctn.com/ .

Key Points: · Well-being during pregnancy is often diminished and the WHO 5-Item well-being index is a useful measure in clinical settings to assess maternal well-being.. · Breastfeeding is a high-priority research area, particularly in an Irish setting.. · Well-being was not related to breastfeeding, however age, BMI and education were the main predictors of low well-being during pregnancy..

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11150067PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0043-1772230DOI Listing

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