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Women Empowered Through Education to Breastfeed

Not Applicable
Conditions
Breastfeeding
Pain
Nipple Pain During Lactation
Interventions
Other: Education on breastfeeding pain
Registration Number
NCT03481166
Lead Sponsor
Western University, Canada
Brief Summary

The experience of breastfeeding-related pain is common for postpartum women, but is not often anticipated as part of the postpartum experience. This feasibility randomized controlled trial aims to examine the effectiveness of a nurse-led educational intervention using anticipatory guidance among pregnant women wishing to breastfeed on breastfeeding outcomes, breastfeeding-related pain, and maternal satisfaction.

Detailed Description

Despite the relative ubiquity of breastfeeding-related pain, exploratory studies suggest women are largely unprepared for breastfeeding-related pain in the early postpartum period \[1-3\]. In turn, postpartum women often experience an incongruence between how breastfeeding is idealized by Western society, and the reality of their early breastfeeding experiences. Furthermore, painful breastfeeding experiences serve to intensify this incongruity and may lead to disillusionment, feelings of negative self-worth and premature breastfeeding cessation \[1,3\]. As such, the overarching goals of this one-year project are to compare usual prenatal education to anticipatory guidance to: 1) examine the effectiveness of a breastfeeding education session using anticipatory guidance on breastfeeding outcomes and satisfaction during the postpartum period; and 2) test the feasibility of the methods and procedures needed for the successful implementation and validity of a full-scale randomized controlled trial (RCT). This one-year project has 5 objectives:

To fill a knowledge gap in nursing and allied health-related literature by examining the effect of a one-hour, nurse-led, breastfeeding education session using anticipatory guidance during pregnancy on: Objective 1: breastfeeding duration and exclusivity versus those receiving usual prenatal education; Objective 2: overall satisfaction with the educational experience versus those receiving usual prenatal education; Objective 3: breastfeeding self-efficacy and infant feeding attitudes; Objective 4: postpartum breastfeeding-related pain and; Objective 5: To determine if this intervention study protocol is practical (e.g., accrual rates, satisfaction, compliance, sample size) and to test the process, resources, management and scientific basis \[4\] for a future, full-scale RCT.

Forty pregnant women enrolled in prenatal classes provided by the Middlesex London Health Unit (MLHU) and who are intending to breastfeed will be enrolled in this feasibility randomized controlled trial.

Following ethics approval, interested pregnant women who have enrolled in/awaiting antenatal classes at the MLHU will contact the RA to discuss the study. Interested women will be screened for eligibility, and if eligible and consenting, baseline data will be collected. Participants will then be randomized to either intervention (n=20) or control group (n=20). Randomization will be achieved by using sealed, opaque, sequentially numbered envelopes containing randomly generated numbers, prepared by an RA external to the study. An RA will open the next sequentially numbered envelope and reveal the group allocation to the participant. The control group will receive usual antenatal education provided to all women who enroll in MLHU prenatal classes. The intervention group will receive an additional one-hour 'booster session' (by a perinatal RN) of antenatal education specifically focused on the postpartum experience of breastfeeding, including anticipatory guidance around breastfeeding-related pain, and management strategies. To control for contamination, women who have peers/family already in the study will be excluded. An emailed link to a follow-up questionnaire will be sent at 2 and 4 weeks postpartum to determine if they are breastfeeding or not, breastfeeding exclusivity, level of breastfeeding-related pain, breastfeeding self-efficacy, maternal attitudes toward infant feeding, and maternal satisfaction with antenatal education.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria

Women who self-enrolled in prenatal education classes at public health unit who:

  • Can read and write in English
  • Less than or equal to 32 weeks gestation (in pregnancy)
  • Planning to breastfeed their infant
  • 19 years of age or older
  • Internet accessible
Exclusion Criteria
  • Greater than 32 weeks gestation
  • have been identified as having a high-risk pregnancy
  • have self-identified barriers to breastfeeding
  • have peers or family already enrolled in the study

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Education on breastfeeding painEducation on breastfeeding painBoth the experimental and control groups will receive usual prenatal education offered through our regional public health program. In addition to usual prenatal education, the experimental group will also receive a one-hour, nurse led (a Registered Nurse specially trained in perinatal care), small group-based education session with specific focus on breastfeeding pain. The goals of this educational intervention are to provide pregnant women with anticipatory guidance around pain which is commonly experienced while breastfeeding in the first two weeks postpartum. Education will include the prevalence, etiology and management of various types of breastfeeding-related pain experienced postpartum.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Breastfeeding duration4 weeks postpartum

Breastfeeding duration will be measured by asking women if they have breastfed in the past 24 hours or not. If a participant has stopped breastfeeding, they will be asked for the last date they breastfed their infant to determine the number of days (duration) of breastfeeding.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Breastfeeding exclusivity2 and 4 weeks postpartum

Breastfeeding exclusivity is defined as the receipt of breast milk only with no additional food or liquid, including water. Breastfeeding exclusivity will be categorized according to the World Health Organization Infant and Young Child Feeding guidelines (2009) with the following categories: exclusive breastfeeding, predominant, complimentary feeding, breastfeeding or bottle-feeding. Among the extant breastfeeding literature, this is the most commonly utilized means to measure breastfeeding exclusivity.

Pain severity4 weeks postpartum

Pain severity will be measured using an 11-point numeric rating scale, where zero represents no pain, and 10 represents the worst pain imaginable.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Middlesex London Health Unit

🇨🇦

London, Ontario, Canada

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