1 / 22

The changing patterns of infant feeding in Scotland – exclusive or mixed messages?

The changing patterns of infant feeding in Scotland – exclusive or mixed messages?. ‘Tomi Ajetunmobi, Bruce Whyte Glasgow Centre for Population Health/ ISD Scotland 10 th November, 2011. Introduction/Background Aims and objectives Definitions Results Conclusions. Outline.

chiko
Download Presentation

The changing patterns of infant feeding in Scotland – exclusive or mixed messages?

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The changing patterns of infant feeding in Scotland – exclusive or mixed messages? ‘Tomi Ajetunmobi, Bruce Whyte Glasgow Centre for Population Health/ ISD Scotland 10th November, 2011

  2. Introduction/Background Aims and objectives Definitions Results Conclusions Outline

  3. The WHO recommends exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months. The benefits of breastfeeding to both mother and infant are well established. In Scotland, although there have been programs and policies set up to improve and monitor breastfeeding, the proportion of exclusively breastfed infants remains one of the lowest in Europe and has remained relatively stable over the past 10 years. Introduction

  4. 2 main aims: To carry out analysis using a new using linked dataset in order to investigate breastfeeding trends nationally and locally and to inform future monitoring To investigate the unexpected increase in breastfeeding in selected deprived neighbourhoods within Greater Glasgow and Clyde Background: GCPH Breastfeeding Project

  5. Overview of data schemes Outcome Variables Predictor Variables Infant feeding – initiation (first feed, feed on hospital discharge) Geography (NHS Board, CHP, Neighbourhood area, hospital) NRS(GROS) Maternal characteristics (e.g. maternal age, marital status, ethnicity, socioeconomic characteristics, deprivation, smoking status) SMR02 Pregnancy/Delivery characteristics (e.g. gestation, previous pregnancies, parity, length of stay, mode of delivery, outcome, multiple birth, caesarean section,) CHSP-PS Infant feeding - duration (feed on hospital discharge, feed at community discharge, feed at first visit, 6 to 8 week review, 8-9 month review) SBR/SMR11 Infant characteristics (e.g. APGAR score, birth weight, congenital anomaly, neonatal/infant admission, length of stay) SSBID NRS(GROS) – Births; SMR02 – Maternal hospital records ; CHSP-PS - Child Health Surveillance (pre-school); SBR/SMR11 - Scottish Birth Record/Neonatal and infant health; SSBID - Scottish Still Birth and Infant Death Records

  6. Exclusive breastfeeding Bottle (Formula) feeding Mixed formula and breastfeeding Complementary/supplementary Flexible, partial or minimal* *Morse JM & Harrison MJ (1988) Patterns of mixed feeding. Midwifery 4:19-28 Infant feeding definitions

  7. Infant feeding trends

  8. Scotland: Exclusive breastfeeding trends

  9. Scotland: Mixed feeding trends

  10. Infant feeding amongst first time mothers

  11. Scotland: Mixed feeding trends amongst first-time mothers

  12. First-time mothers: Infant feeding trends 2001 and 2009 2001 2009

  13. First-time mothers: Mixed feeding and maternal age 2001 and 2009

  14. First-time mothers: mixed feeding as a proportion of any breastfeeding by maternal age

  15. First-time mothers: mixed feeding as a proportion of any breastfeeding by area deprivation

  16. First-time mothers: infant feeding trends by neonatal admission

  17. Mixed feeding as a proportion of any breastfeeding by neonatal admission

  18. Factors that increased the likelihood of mixed feeding compared to exclusive breastfeeding at the first visit

  19. Mixed feeding is associated with: (Further) reduced milk supply Infants separated from mothers due to ill health, work/child care arrangements Flexibility/social contexts Commencing weaning/early weaning practices In other studies…

  20. Exclusive breastfeeding rates have remained relatively static while mixed feeding rates are increasing. Mixed fed infants are similar to exclusively breastfed infants. However compared to exclusively breastfed infants mixed feeding is associated with: Infant ill-health/admission to neonatal ward Maternal health care/delivery characteristics Demographic background of parents (e.g. place of birth, deprivation) Further research will be required to understand the patterns of mixed feeding and its influence on infant health. Conclusion

  21. GCPH Breastfeeding project is jointly funded by the Scottish Centre for Public Health Research and Policy (SCPHRP) and GCPH. The project is being managed by Bruce Whyte (GCPH) With support from an advisory group: James Egan (Public Health Programme Manager, GCPH) Jim Chalmers (Public Health Consultant, ISD Scotland) Rachel Woods (Public Health Consultant, ISD Scotland) Diane Stockton (Public Health Specialist, ISD Scotland) Judith Tait (Child Health Information Team Leader, ISD Scotland) Linda Wolfson (Infant Feeding Advisor, NHS GG&C), Jill Muirie (Public Health Advisor, NHS Health Scotland) Ruth Campbell (Consultant Dietitian, NHS Ayrshire & Arran) Helen Yewdell (Scottish Government) David Tappin (Senior Clinical Lecturer, PEACH unit, Royal Hospital for Sick Children, Glasgow) Acknowledgements

  22. Thank you!

More Related