Medical University of South Carolina Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Charleston, South Carolina, USA.
Yale School of Medicine Department of Pediatrics, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.
Breastfeed Med. 2021 Feb;16(2):150-155. doi: 10.1089/bfm.2020.0306. Epub 2021 Feb 4.
Racial disparities in breastfeeding rates persist in the United States with Black women having the lowest rates of initiation and continuation. A literature review attributes this to many factors-historical roles, cultural norms, lack of social support, and systemic racism in the health care and lactation support system. The Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) is an evidence-based program to increase breastfeeding through standardized protocols, and, in a Southeastern U.S. academic center, it was associated with increased breastfeeding, but the effect on racial disparities in breastfeeding was unknown. Through an institutional Perinatal Information Systems database, breastfeeding rates were compared before and after BFHI implementation. Breastfeeding initiation, sustained breastfeeding 24-hours before discharge, and patient demographics were assessed. After BFHI implementation, mothers were overall 1.17 (95% confidence interval: 1.13-1.19) times more likely to initiate breastfeeding. For Black mothers, breastfeeding initiation increased significantly from 52% to 66%, but they were significantly less likely to sustain in-hospital breastfeeding compared to nonBlack mothers (69.4% versus 84.6%, < 0.0001). Several demographic and medical comorbidities were significantly associated with failure to sustain breastfeeding to hospital discharge. When controlling for these factors, the racial disparity persisted. Since BFHI implementation, the racial gap in breastfeeding initiation decreased, but a significant disparity remained for sustained in-hospital breastfeeding. This study highlights the success of the BFHI program, but in the context of the current literature, also reveals the need for further work to ensure interventions are culturally competent and delivered equitably to support sustained breastfeeding for Black women.
在美国,母乳喂养率存在种族差异,其中黑人女性的母乳喂养起始率和持续率最低。文献综述认为,这归因于许多因素,包括历史角色、文化规范、缺乏社会支持以及医疗保健和哺乳支持系统中的系统性种族主义。婴儿友好医院倡议(Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative,BFHI)是一个基于证据的计划,通过标准化方案来增加母乳喂养率,而在美国东南部的一家学术中心,它与母乳喂养率的增加有关,但对母乳喂养率种族差异的影响尚不清楚。通过机构围产期信息系统数据库,比较了 BFHI 实施前后的母乳喂养率。评估了母乳喂养起始率、出院前 24 小时持续母乳喂养率以及患者人口统计学特征。在实施 BFHI 后,母亲总体上更有可能开始母乳喂养,母乳喂养起始率提高了 1.17 倍(95%置信区间:1.13-1.19)。对于黑人母亲,母乳喂养起始率从 52%显著增加到 66%,但与非黑人母亲相比,她们在医院内持续母乳喂养的可能性显著降低(69.4%对 84.6%,<0.0001)。一些人口统计学和合并症与未能持续母乳喂养至出院显著相关。在控制这些因素后,种族差异仍然存在。自 BFHI 实施以来,母乳喂养起始率的种族差距有所缩小,但在医院内持续母乳喂养方面仍存在显著差距。本研究强调了 BFHI 计划的成功,但在当前文献的背景下,也揭示了需要进一步努力,以确保干预措施具有文化能力,并公平地提供,以支持黑人女性持续母乳喂养。