Abstract

Optimisation of breastfeeding practices could reduce high mortality rates in children younger than 5 years, but in DR Congo, despite near-universal breastfeeding initiation and nine of ten children still breastfeeding at 1 year of age, exclusivity remains a difficulty. We assessed the effect on breastfeeding outcomes of a short-cut implementation of a programme called the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding, the key component of the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI). We did a cluster-randomised controlled trial and randomly assigned health-care clinics in Kinshasa, DR Congo, to standard care (control group), BFHI steps 1-9 (steps 1-9 group), or BFHI steps 1-9 plus additional support during well-child visits (steps 1-10 group) with computer-generated random numbers used to assign matched pairs to study groups. Mothers at these clinics who had given birth to one healthy baby during enrolment, and who expressed their intentions of visiting a well-baby session at the same clinic, were eligible and received the treatment assigned to their clinic. Mother-infant pairs were excluded if the mothers intended to attend well-baby clinic visits at a different health facility, or to travel before the child was aged at least 6 months. Participants and independent interviewers were masked to group assignment (ie, they were recruited after randomisaion and training of the clinic staff and were not informed of the study scheme), but clinical staff were unmasked. BFHI steps 1-9 and 1-10 were given by health-care staff trained with the WHO/UNICEF BFHI course. The primary outcomes were breastfeeding initiation within 1 h of birth and exclusive breastfeeding at age 14 and 24 weeks, assessed at face-to-face interviews in the clinic. Analysis was by intention to treat. Prevalence ratios (PR) were adjusted for cluster effects and baseline characteristics. This trial is registered at ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT01428232, and is closed to new participants. Between May 24, and Aug 25, 2012, we randomly assigned two eligible clinics to control, two to BFHI steps 1-9, and two to BFHI steps 1-10. We enrolled 975 eligible mother-infant pairs (304 in the control group, 363 in the steps 1-9 group, and 308 in the steps 1-10 group). 230 (76%) of infants in the control group, 263 (72%) in the steps 1-9 group, and 220 (71%) in the steps 1-10 group were breastfed within 1 h of birth; these results did not differ significantly between groups. Prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding at age 14 weeks was 89 (29%) in the control group, 237 (65%) in the steps 1-9 group (adjusted PR 2·20, 95% CI 1·73-2·77), and 129 (42%) in the steps 1-10 group (1·40, 1·13-1·74). At age 24 weeks, the prevalence of exclusive breastfeeding was 36 (12%) in the control group, 131 (36%) in the steps 1-9 group (3·50, 2·76-4·43), and 43 (14%) in the steps 1-10 group (1·31, 0·91-1·89). In the setting of health-care clinics in DR Congo with a high proportion of mothers initiating breastfeeding, implementation of basic training in BFHI steps 1-9 had no additional effect on initiation of breastfeeding but significantly increased exclusive breastfeeding at 6 months of age. Additional support based on the same training materials and locally available breastfeeding support materials, offered during well-child visits (ie, step 10) did not enhance this effect, and might have actually lessened it.

Highlights

  • Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo) is one of 13 countries that has had no progress towards Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 4, a reduction of mortality in children younger than 5 years by two-thirds by the year 2015.1 DR Congo has the third largest burden of child deaths worldwide,[2] and mortality in children younger than 5 years has remained high: from 180 deaths of every

  • Evidence before this study The rationale for our investigation was based on a 2007 Cochrane review of 44 trials in 14 countries and a review by the US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which both showed that all forms of extra support had a positive effect on the duration of exclusive breastfeeding, and that the treatment effect was greater when the intervention was delivered by nonprofessionals

  • Only one of those trials was done in Africa (Nigeria), which showed that monthly group counselling by trained peer educators combined with text and voice messages sent every week had a positive effect on timely initiation of breastfeeding and on exclusive breastfeeding at 6 months

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Summary

Introduction

Democratic Republic of the Congo (DR Congo) is one of 13 countries that has had no progress towards Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 4, a reduction of mortality in children younger than 5 years by two-thirds by the year 2015.1 DR Congo has the third largest burden of child deaths worldwide,[2] and mortality in children younger than 5 years has remained high: from 180 deaths of every1000 livebirths in the year 1990 to 170 of 1000 livebirths in 2010. Evidence before this study The rationale for our investigation was based on a 2007 Cochrane review of 44 trials in 14 countries and a review by the US Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, which both showed that all forms of extra support had a positive effect on the duration of exclusive breastfeeding, and that the treatment effect was greater when the intervention was delivered by nonprofessionals (lay support). Whether those findings were applicable in Africa was unclear because no study of healthy mothers from this region was included in the reviews. The number of babies with reported diarrhoea or infections was reduced in the intervention groups

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