Abstract
BackgroundIncreasing breastfeeding rates have been associated with reductions in disease in babies and mothers as well as in related costs. ‘Nourishing Start for Health (NoSH)’, a financial incentive scheme has been proposed as a potentially effective way to increase both the number of mothers breastfeeding and duration of breastfeeding.AimsTo establish women’s relative preferences for different aspects of a financial incentive scheme for breastfeeding and to identify importance of scheme characteristics on probability on participation in an incentive scheme.MethodsA discrete choice experiment (DCE) obtained information on alternative specifications of the NoSH scheme designed to promote continued breastfeeding duration until at least 6 weeks after birth. Four attributes framed alternative scheme designs: value of the incentive; minimum breastfeeding duration required to receive incentive; method of verifying breastfeeding; type of incentive. Three versions of the DCE questionnaire, each containing 8 different choice sets, provided 24 choice sets for analysis. The questionnaire was mailed to 2,531 women in the South Yorkshire Cohort (SYC) aged 16–45 years in IMD quintiles 3–5. The analytic approach considered conditional and mixed effects logistic models to account for preference heterogeneity that may be associated with a variation in effects mediated by respondents’ characteristics.Results564 women completed the questionnaire and a response rate of 22% was achieved. Most of the included attributes were found to affect utility and therefore the probability to participate in the incentive scheme. Higher rewards were preferred, although the type of incentive significantly affected women’s preferences on average. We found evidence for preference heterogeneity based on individual characteristics that mediated preferences for an incentive scheme.ConclusionsAlthough participants’ opinion in our sample was mixed, financial incentives for breastfeeding may be an acceptable and effective instrument to change behaviour. However, individual characteristics could mediate the effect and should therefore be considered when developing and targeting future interventions.
Highlights
Breastfeeding promotes health and prevention of disease in both infant and mother in the short and long term [1, 2]
Most of the included attributes were found to affect utility and the probability to participate in the incentive scheme
We found evidence for preference heterogeneity based on individual characteristics that mediated preferences for an incentive scheme.Conclusions
Summary
Breastfeeding promotes health and prevention of disease in both infant and mother in the short and long term [1, 2]. Breastfeeding rates in the UK are among the lowest worldwide where rates for continued breastfeeding decrease rapidly after birth [4], contributing to increased preventable illnesses and substantial associated health care costs [1, 5]. Quigley [2] found that supporting mothers in breastfeeding exclusively for longer durations was associated with substantial cost savings, both from reduced breast cancer prevalence and health improvements related to four acute conditions in infants. In order to reach this cost saving potential, exclusive breastfeeding rates would have to increase from 7% to 45% at 4 months and from 35% to 75% at discharge from hospital. Increasing breastfeeding rates have been associated with reductions in disease in babies and mothers as well as in related costs. ‘Nourishing Start for Health (NoSH)’, a financial incentive scheme has been proposed as a potentially effective way to increase both the number of mothers breastfeeding and duration of breastfeeding
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