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Use of a supplemental feeding tube device and breastfeeding at 4 weeks / Frances Penny, Elizabeth Brownell, Michelle Judge, Mary Marshall-Crim, Diana Cartagena, and Jacqueline McGrath

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextDescription: Vol. 48 (6) pages 334-340 : illustrations ; 27 cmUniform titles:
  • The American Journal of Maternal/Child Nursing / Nov- Dec 2023
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Abstract

Background: Mothers having difficulty breastfeeding their infants may use alternative supportive feeding methods. Although a supplemental feeding tube device is commonly used, efficacy for supporting sustained breastfeeding remains unknown.

Purpose:
To describe supplemental feeding tube device use by breastfeeding mothers as an alternative feeding method through exploration of associations between supplemental feeding tube device use and continued breastfeeding at 4 weeks of infant's age.

Method: Forty mothers participated. They were interviewed during the birth hospitalization and at 4 weeks postpartum. Questions addressed use of supplemental feeding tube devices, breastfeeding issues, and continued breastfeeding relationships. We examined the relationship between LATCH scores at 2 to 3 days of life.

Results: Breastfeeding mothers who chose to supplement with bottle-feeding instead of use of a supplemental feeding tube device were 30% less likely to continue breastfeeding at a medium/high/exclusive level.

Conclusion: Use of the supplemental feeding tube device may help avoid the potentially detrimental effect of bottle-feeding on continued breastfeeding.

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