Springall Tanisha L, McLachlan Helen L, Forster Della A, Browne Jennifer, Chamberlain Catherine
Judith Lumley Centre, School of Nursing and Midwifery, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Judith Lumley Centre, School of Nursing and Midwifery, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Women Birth. 2024 Jul;37(4):101634. doi: 10.1016/j.wombi.2024.101634. Epub 2024 Jun 20.
Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (referred to hereafter as Aboriginal) women breastfeed at lower rates than non-Aboriginal women, and rates vary across and within Aboriginal populations.
To determine rates of breastfeeding initiation and maintenance and compare individually collected survey data with existing routinely collected state and national breastfeeding data for Aboriginal women.
CINAHL, Medline, EMBASE, SCOPUS, PsycINFO, and the Cochrane library were searched for peer-reviewed literature published between 1995 and 2021. Quantitative studies written in English and reporting breastfeeding for Aboriginal women or women having an Aboriginal infant were included. Screening and quality assessment included co-screening 10 % of papers. Two reviewers completed data extraction. A proportional meta-analysis was undertaken for breastfeeding initiation and narrative data synthesis used to summarise breastfeeding maintenance.
The initial search identified 12,091 records, with 31 full text studies retrieved, and 27 reports from 22 studies met inclusion criteria. Breastfeeding initiation was 79 % (95 % CI 0.73, 0.85), however, rates were lower than non-Aboriginal women. Maintenance ranged between one week and five years. Rates and definitions varied significantly between studies, with inconsistencies in government collection and reporting of breastfeeding.
Significant variation in definitions and reporting make comparisons difficult. Breastfeeding rates were below recommended targets. Future pattern and trend analyses require standardised measures and definitions. Current collection and reporting of breastfeeding data, particularly routinely collected state-based data, is inadequate to present an accurate picture of current breastfeeding in Australia for Aboriginal women and infants, and to effectively inform interventions and policies.
澳大利亚原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民(以下简称原住民)女性的母乳喂养率低于非原住民女性,且原住民群体内部及之间的母乳喂养率存在差异。
确定母乳喂养开始和持续的比率,并将单独收集的调查数据与现有的针对原住民女性的常规收集的州和国家母乳喂养数据进行比较。
检索了CINAHL、Medline、EMBASE、SCOPUS、PsycINFO和Cochrane图书馆,以查找1995年至2021年间发表的同行评审文献。纳入了用英文撰写的、报告原住民女性或生育原住民婴儿的女性母乳喂养情况的定量研究。筛选和质量评估包括对10%的论文进行共同筛选。两名评审员完成了数据提取。对母乳喂养开始情况进行了比例荟萃分析,并采用叙述性数据综合方法总结母乳喂养持续情况。
初步检索识别出12091条记录,检索到31项全文研究,22项研究的27份报告符合纳入标准。母乳喂养开始率为79%(95%CI 0.73,0.85),然而,该比率低于非原住民女性。持续时间在一周至五年之间。不同研究之间的比率和定义差异很大,政府在母乳喂养收集和报告方面存在不一致之处。
定义和报告的显著差异使得比较变得困难。母乳喂养率低于推荐目标。未来的模式和趋势分析需要标准化的测量方法和定义。目前母乳喂养数据的收集和报告,尤其是基于州的常规收集数据,不足以准确呈现澳大利亚原住民妇女和婴儿当前的母乳喂养情况,也无法有效地为干预措施和政策提供信息。