Publication | Closed Access
Hospital Practices and Breastfeeding Duration: A Meta‐Analysis of Controlled Trials
46
Citations
8
References
1989
Year
Family MedicineEarly ContactBreastfeedingMaternity ServiceHospital MedicineNegative Clinical EffectPrimary CareLactationHealth CommunicationHospital PracticesPublic HealthHealth Services ResearchMaternal HealthBreastfeeding DurationNurse-family PartnershipNursingInfant NutritionPediatricsNursing ResearchMedicine
Controlled clinical trials studying the influence of hospital practices on breastfeeding duration were combined using meta-analysis. Nine studies were selected. Supplementation demonstrated a negative clinical effect on breastfeeding duration that was not significant. Nursing support demonstrated a positive clinical effect on breastfeeding duration that was not statistically significant if there was no telephone follow-up, but was significant if there was telephone follow-up. Early contact revealed a positive clinical effect that was significant. We conclude that early contact and nursing support with telephone follow-up appear as enhancing factors of breastfeeding duration.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1