School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Canberra, Bruce, Australia.
School of Health Science, University of Canberra, Bruce, Australia.
Int Breastfeed J. 2024 Jan 18;19(1):4. doi: 10.1186/s13006-023-00603-y.
Breastfeeding provides many short- and long-term health benefits for mothers and their infants and is a particularly relevant strategy for women who experience Gestational Diabetes Mellitus (GDM) during pregnancy. However, breastfeeding rates are generally lower amongst this group of women than the general population. This review's objective is to identify the factors that influence breastfeeding by exploring the experiences and outcomes of women in in high-income health care contexts when there is a history of GDM in the corresponding pregnancy.
A comprehensive search strategy explored the electronic databases Medline, CINAHL, Web of Science and Scopus for primary studies exploring breastfeeding practices for papers published between January 2011 and June 2023. All papers were screened independently by two researchers with included papers assessed using the Crowe Critical Appraisal tool. Findings were analysed using a narrative synthesis framework.
From an initial search result of 1037 papers, 16 papers representing five high-income nations were included in this review for analysis - the United States of America (n = 10), Australia (n = 3), Finland (n = 1), Norway (n = 1), and Israel (n = 1). Fifteen papers used a quantitative design, and one used a qualitative design. The total number of participants represented in the papers is 963,718 of which 812,052 had GDM and 151,666 did not. Women with an immediate history of GDM were as likely to initiate breastfeeding as those without it. However, they were more likely to have the first feed delayed, be offered supplementation, experience delayed lactogenesis II and or a perception of low supply. Women were less likely to exclusively breastfeed and more likely to completely wean earlier than the general population. Maternity care practices, maternal factors, family influences, and determinants of health were contextual and acted as either a facilitator or barrier for this group.
Breastfeeding education and support need to be tailored to recognise the individual needs and challenges of women with a history of GDM. Interventions, including the introduction of commercial milk formula (CMF) may have an even greater impact and needs to be very carefully considered. Supportive strategies should encompass the immediate and extended family who are major sources of influence.
母乳喂养为母亲及其婴儿提供了许多短期和长期的健康益处,对于在怀孕期间患有妊娠糖尿病(GDM)的女性来说,这是一种特别相关的策略。然而,在这群女性中,母乳喂养率普遍低于一般人群。本综述的目的是通过探索有 GDM 病史的女性在高收入医疗保健背景下的经历和结果,确定影响母乳喂养的因素。
采用全面的搜索策略,在 Medline、CINAHL、Web of Science 和 Scopus 电子数据库中搜索 2011 年 1 月至 2023 年 6 月期间发表的探索母乳喂养实践的原始研究。两名研究人员独立筛选所有论文,并使用 Crowe 批判性评价工具评估纳入论文。使用叙述性综合框架分析研究结果。
从最初的 1037 篇论文中,有 16 篇论文代表五个高收入国家被纳入本综述进行分析-美国(n=10)、澳大利亚(n=3)、芬兰(n=1)、挪威(n=1)和以色列(n=1)。15 篇论文采用定量设计,1 篇采用定性设计。论文中代表的参与者总数为 963718 人,其中 812052 人患有 GDM,151666 人没有。有 GDM 病史的女性与没有 GDM 病史的女性一样可能开始母乳喂养。然而,她们更有可能延迟第一次喂养,接受补充喂养,经历延迟的乳糖生成 II 和/或低供应的感觉。这些女性不太可能完全母乳喂养,并且比一般人群更早完全断奶。产妇保健实践、产妇因素、家庭影响以及健康决定因素具有背景性,成为该群体的促进因素或障碍。
母乳喂养教育和支持需要根据有 GDM 病史的女性的个体需求和挑战进行调整。干预措施,包括引入商业配方奶(CMF),可能会产生更大的影响,需要非常谨慎地考虑。支持性策略应包括对有重大影响的直系亲属和大家庭成员。