Abstract
INTRODUCTION:Assessment of mothers’ breastfeeding attitudes during the COVID-19 pandemic can aid healthcare professionals in planning appropriate breastfeeding counseling. The aim of our study is to assess the breastfeeding attitudes of puerperal women during the COVID-19 pandemic and the related factors.METHODS:A cross-sectional study was conducted on 470 postpartum women who delivered in a state hospital in Turkey in 2022. Participants were selected through simple random sampling.RESULTS:The mean score on the Breastfeeding Attitude Evaluation Scale was 101.11 ± 19.79 (scores range from 0 to 184). Factors that positively influenced breastfeeding attitude included initiating breastfeeding in the first hour after birth (p= .043), planning exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months (p= .004), intending to breastfeed for 24 months or more (p= .008), giving breast milk as the baby’s first food (p= .017), believing that a COVID-19-infected mother should breastfeed her baby (p= .000), and not separating a COVID-19-positive mother from her baby (p= .014). Conversely, being a primiparous mother (p= .011) and not believing that breast milk protects the baby from COVID-19 (p= .011) negatively impacted the breastfeeding attitude.CONCLUSION:This study found that postpartum women had positive breastfeeding attitudes during the COVID-19 pandemic, and certain factors influenced these attitudes.
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