A Technological Approach to Improved Breastfeeding Rates and Self-Efficacy
- Conditions
- Breastfeeding
- Interventions
- Other: "Breastfeeding at AU" Smartphone Application
- Registration Number
- NCT05673317
- Lead Sponsor
- Augusta University
- Brief Summary
To provide patients with easily accessible information in the form of a smartphone application regarding medically appropriate information about breastfeeding and to assess the impact this information has on women's breastfeeding rates and perception of self-efficacy (primary outcome).
- Detailed Description
The benefits of breastfeeding for both mother and neonate have been well documented and extensively researched. Breastfeeding rates remain suboptimal despite known advantages including reduced lifetime risk of maternal ovarian cancer, more rapid return to pre-gestational weight, improvement in maternal/neonatal bonding, reduction in neonatal allergic/immunologic conditions. Both non-modifiable and modifiable factors affecting a mother's decision regarding breastfeeding have been identified. Modifiable factors include breastfeeding knowledge, self-efficacy, and confidence. Breastfeeding self-efficacy has been positively correlated with breastfeeding duration. There is a lack of local data on breastfeeding rates, duration, and self-efficacy in the Augusta University women's health population as well as a lack of documented improvement of these factors following educational programs. Our study aims to create a program that is easily accessible and available to our patient population in the form of a free application available on Apple devices capable of accessing the internet (e.g., i-phone, i-pad, etc.). This study will be a randomized controlled pilot study. The intervention group will have access to the application while the control group will not. Our hypothesis is that the application will improve breastfeeding rates, duration, and self-efficacy if offered to at the time of delivery or within the first week postpartum. This will be assessed by comparing initial self-efficacy survey results (within 1 week postpartum) with survey results at 4 to 6 weeks postpartum.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- Female
- Target Recruitment
- 40
- Patients intending to breastfeed receiving prenatal care at Augusta University.
- No documented anatomic differences in mother's chest anatomy.
- Access to the internet via an Apple® device (such as i-phone or i-pad).
- Delivery at Augusta University Medical Center
- Significant maternal intrapartum or postpartum complications (i.e., postpartum hemorrhage > 2000 mL, uterine inversion, retained products, ICU admission, postpartum psychosis).
- Infants admitted to neonatal intensive care unit >48 hours
- Pre-term deliveries prior to 37 weeks gestation
- Infants with cleft palate, or other palate/facial defects
- Patients without email access or internet access
- Patients without an Apple® device (i-phone, i-pad)
- Non-English speaker
- Patients unable to breastfeed secondary to contraindicated communicable disease (i.e.
HIV)
- Patients unable to breastfeed secondary to contraindicated medications
- Patients of infants up for adoption
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Experiment Arm "Breastfeeding at AU" Smartphone Application The participant will receive usual breastfeeding care such as counseling by her physician, access to lactation consults, nursing assistance in the hospital, access to our online resources. The participant will also receive the breastfeeding application at admission to labor and delivery or in the immediate postpartum period. The participant will be taught how to use the application, and will have access to the study to continue use throughout the duration of follow-up.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy Score 6 weeks The breastfeeding self-efficacy short form is a validated, standardized form to assess participants' sense of breastfeeding self-efficacy.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Breastfeeding rate 6 weeks
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Augusta University
🇺🇸Augusta, Georgia, United States