National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
Faculty of Medicine & Health Sciences, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Serdang, Malaysia.
JAMA Pediatr. 2024 Jun 1;178(6):567-576. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2024.0814.
Human milk feeding is a key public health goal to optimize infant and maternal/parental health, but global lactation outcomes do not meet recommended duration and exclusivity. There are connections between lactation and mental health.
To appraise all available evidence on whether the provision of relaxation interventions to lactating individuals improves lactation and well-being.
Embase, MEDLINE, CINAHL, Allied and Complementary Medicine Database, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library were searched on September 30, 2023, and topic experts were consulted.
Two independent reviewers screened for eligibility. Inclusion criteria were full-text, peer-reviewed publications with a randomized clinical trial design. Techniques that were entirely physical (eg, massage) were excluded. A total of 7% of initially identified studies met selection criteria.
Two independent reviewers extracted data and assessed risk of bias with the Cochrane Risk of Bias 2 tool. Fixed-effects meta-analysis and Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluations guidelines were used to synthesize and present evidence.
Prespecified primary outcomes were human milk quantity, length and exclusivity of human milk feeding, milk macronutrients/cortisol, and infant growth and behavior.
A total of 16 studies were included with 1871 participants (pooled mean [SD] age for 1656 participants, 29.6 [6.1] years). Interventions were music, guided relaxation, mindfulness, and breathing exercises/muscle relaxation. Provision of relaxation was not associated with a change in human milk protein (mean difference [MD], 0 g/100 mL; 95% CI, 0; 205 participants). Provision of relaxation was associated with an increase in human milk quantity (standardized mean difference [SMD], 0.73; 95% CI, 0.57-0.89; 464 participants), increased infant weight gain in breastfeeding infants (MD, z score change = 0.51; 95% CI, 0.30-0.72; 226 participants), and a slight reduction in stress and anxiety (SMD stress score, -0.49; 95% CI, -0.70 to -0.27; 355 participants; SMD anxiety score, -0.45; 95% CI, -0.67 to -0.22; 410 participants).
Results of this systematic review and meta-analysis suggest that provision of relaxation was associated with an increase in human milk quantity and infant weight gain and a slight reduction in stress and anxiety. Relaxation interventions can be offered to lactating parents who would like to increase well-being and improve milk supply or, where directly breastfeeding, increase infant weight gain.
母乳喂养是优化婴儿和母婴/父母健康的一个关键公共卫生目标,但全球哺乳结果并未达到推荐的持续时间和排他性。哺乳与心理健康之间存在联系。
评估提供放松干预措施给哺乳个体是否能改善哺乳和幸福感的所有现有证据。
2023 年 9 月 30 日,Embase、MEDLINE、CINAHL、补充和综合医学数据库、Web of Science 和 Cochrane 图书馆进行了检索,并咨询了主题专家。
两名独立的审查员筛选了合格性。纳入标准为具有随机临床试验设计的全文同行评审出版物。完全是物理的技术(例如按摩)被排除在外。最初确定的研究中只有 7%符合选择标准。
两名独立的审查员提取了数据,并使用 Cochrane 风险偏倚 2 工具评估了风险。使用固定效应荟萃分析和推荐评估、制定与评估指南来综合和呈现证据。
预先指定的主要结果是人乳量、人乳喂养的长度和排他性、乳汁宏量营养素/皮质醇以及婴儿的生长和行为。
共有 16 项研究纳入了 1871 名参与者(1656 名参与者的平均(SD)年龄,29.6(6.1)岁)。干预措施包括音乐、引导放松、正念和呼吸练习/肌肉放松。提供放松与母乳蛋白质变化无关(平均差值[MD],0 g/100 mL;95%置信区间,0;205 名参与者)。提供放松与母乳量增加有关(标准化均数差[SMD],0.73;95%置信区间,0.57-0.89;464 名参与者),母乳喂养婴儿的体重增加(MD,z 评分变化=0.51;95%置信区间,0.30-0.72;226 名参与者),以及压力和焦虑的轻微减少(SMD 压力评分,-0.49;95%置信区间,-0.70 至-0.27;355 名参与者;SMD 焦虑评分,-0.45;95%置信区间,-0.67 至-0.22;410 名参与者)。
本系统评价和荟萃分析的结果表明,提供放松与母乳量增加和婴儿体重增加有关,与压力和焦虑的轻微减少有关。可以向希望增加幸福感和改善母乳供应的哺乳父母提供放松干预措施,或者在直接母乳喂养的情况下,增加婴儿的体重增加。