A breast feeding education and promotion program: Effects on knowledge, attitudes, and support for breast feeding
- 1 December 1995
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Community Health
- Vol. 20 (6) , 473-490
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02277064
Abstract
This study was undertaken to determine the effects of a partner-support, incentive-baed educational program on breast feeding knowledge, attitudes and support and to examine the relationship between feeding intentions and feeding behavior among low-income women. Women who expressed a willingness to participate in the intervention were randomly assigned to “intervention” and “usual breast feeding” (control) groups. Sixty-eight primipara women, with expected due dates between May and December, 1992, volunteered to participate in the study. Of these, 34 were randomly assigned to each of the two groups. Approximately 81 percent of the women completed the study, leaving n=29 in the control group and n-26 in the intervention group. The intervention consisted of special incentives (prizes) for women and their partners to participate in several breast feeding education and promotion activities. Intervention group women and their partners experienced positive changes in breast feeding knowledge and attitudes. Furthermore, the intervention seemed to have influenced more women in the treatment group to breast feed despite their prenatal feeding intentions. In addition, the partners of intervention group women were perceived to be more supportive of, breast feeding than control group partners. These findings suggest that incentives, such as donated prizes, can be used to attract lower socioeconomic group women and their partners to breast feeding promotion interventions. Participation in such interventions can produce positive changes in breast feeding knowledge, attitudes, and support, and can have a dramatic effect in promoting breast feeding.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- A comparison of social support variables between women who intend to breast or bottle feedSocial Science & Medicine, 1992
- Breast-feeding and health in the 1980s: A global epidemiologic reviewThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1991
- The Infant Feeding Decision in Low and Upper Income WomenClinical Pediatrics, 1990
- Lactation nurse increases duration of breast feeding.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1985
- Investigation of a model for the initiation of breastfeeding in primigravida womenSocial Science & Medicine, 1985
- The effect of an education program on the decision to breastfeedJournal of Nutrition Education, 1983
- Important Factors in Breast-feeding SuccessMCN: The American Journal of Maternal/Child Nursing, 1982
- The impact of kin, friend and neighbor networks on infant feeding practicesSocial Science & Medicine, 1982
- Morbidity in breast-fed and artificially fed infants. IIThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1979
- “Breast Is Best”: Modern MeaningsNew England Journal of Medicine, 1977