Abstract

BackgroundHospitalization in neonatal intensive care units with a single-family room design enables continuous maternal presence, but less is known regarding the association with milk production and breastfeeding.Research aimTo compare maternal milk production, breastfeeding self-efficacy, the extent to which infants received mother’s milk, and rate of direct breastfeeding in a single-family room to an open bay neonatal intensive care unit.MethodsA longitudinal, prospective observational study comparing 77 infants born at 28– 32° weeks gestational age and their 66 mothers (n = 35 infants of n = 30 mothers in single family room and n = 42 infants of n = 36 mothers in open bay). Comparisons were made on milk volume produced, the extent to which infants were fed mother’s milk, and rate of direct breastfeeding from birth to 4 months’ corrected infant age. Breastfeeding self-efficacy was compared across mothers who directly breastfed at discharge (n = 45).ResultsFirst expression (6 hr vs. 30 hr, p < .001) and first attempt at breastfeeding (48 hr vs. 109 hr, p < .001) occurred significantly earlier, infants were fed a greater amount of mother’s milk (p < .04), and significantly more infants having single-family room care were exclusively directly breastfed from discharge until 4 months’ corrected age; OR 6.8 (95% CI [2.4, 19.1]). Volumes of milk produced and breastfeeding self-efficacy did not differ significantly between participants in either units.ConclusionTo increase the extent to which infants are fed mother’s own milk and are exclusively directly breastfed, the design of neonatal intensive care units should facilitate continuous maternal presence and privacy for the mother–infant dyad.

Highlights

  • Hospitalization in neonatal intensive care units with a single-­family room design enables continuous maternal presence, but less is known regarding the association with milk production and breastfeeding

  • Infant participants in the SFR unit were more often delivered by caesarean (p = .04) and SFR participant mothers had a lower level of education (p = .02)

  • We found the odds ratio for participant infants to be classified in the less exclusive categories fully, partly, or formula fed decreased by a factor of 0.4 with SFR care compared to OB care; Exp (B) =

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Summary

Introduction

Hospitalization in neonatal intensive care units with a single-­family room design enables continuous maternal presence, but less is known regarding the association with milk production and breastfeeding. Research aim: To compare maternal milk production, breastfeeding self-e­ fficacy, the extent to which infants received mother’s milk, and rate of direct breastfeeding in a single-f­amily room to an open bay neonatal intensive care unit. Results: First expression (6 hr vs 30 hr, p < .001) and first attempt at breastfeeding (48 hr vs 109 hr, p < .001) occurred significantly earlier, infants were fed a greater amount of mother’s milk (p < .04), and significantly more infants having single-­family room care were exclusively directly breastfed from discharge until 4 months’ corrected age; OR 6.8 (95% CI [2.4, 19.1]). Conclusion: To increase the extent to which infants are fed mother’s own milk and are exclusively directly breastfed, the design of neonatal intensive care units should facilitate continuous maternal presence and privacy for the mother–infant dyad. Interventions aimed at improving BSE have been found to be an effective way to increase breastfeeding rates at 1 and 2 months postpartum in healthy term infants (Brockway et al, 2017)

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