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Published byBeatrice Byrd Modified over 8 years ago
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Association Between Maternal Smoking and Breastfeeding at 10 Weeks Kenneth D. Rosenberg, MD, MPH Zhiwei Yu, MPH Alfredo P. Sandoval, MS, MBA Oregon Office of Family Health Portland, Oregon 8 th Annual MCH Epidemiology Conference December 13, 2002 Clearwater Beach, Florida
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Introduction Maternal smoking: Associated with decreased breastfeeding Hakansson et al. (Scand J Prim Health Care 1992;10:60-65): 44% longer. Horta et al. (Am J Epidemiol 1997;146:1128- 1133): smoking not associated with BF initiation but associated with BF duration.
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Background Maternal smoking: before, during or after pregnancy? PRAMS: sample size asks about smoking before, during and after pregnancy
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Methods I Oregon PRAMS Stratified random sample of Oregon resident mothers Year 1: babies born 8/1/98-8/9/99. Weighted for oversampling, nonresponse and noncoverage. Duration of breastfeeding: "For how many weeks did you breast-feed your new baby?" Over 99% completed: after baby 10 weeks old.
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Methods II PRAMS: Smoking before, during and after pregnancy. Before = in the 3 months before pregnancy During = in the last 3 months of pregnancy After = smoking now (10-26 weeks after birth)
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Results I Response rate: 1867/2919 = 64.0% 83.6% of women initiated breastfeeding. 59.5% of women were still breastfeeding at 10 weeks old.
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Results II Strength of Association Between Time of Maternal Smoking and Not Breastfeeding at 10 Weeks (multivariate) Time of Smoking ORa 95% CI Before Pregnancy* Smokers 2.17 1.47, 3.23 During Pregnancy** Smokers 1.85 1.11, 3.13 After Pregnancy*** Smokers 2.56 1.64, 4.00 For all 3 times: reference is non-smokers * Before = in the 3 months before pregnancy ** During = in the last 3 months of pregnancy *** After = smoking now (10-26 weeks after birth)
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Conclusions Maternal smoking: associated with decreased breastfeeding Parallel work: Letson GW, Rosenberg KD and Wu L. Association between smoking during pregnancy and breastfeeding at about two weeks of age in Oregon, 1998. Journal of Human Lactation. 2002;18:368-372 Maternal exposure to nicotine decreases breast milk output. Smoking mothers may have lower milk output and lower prolactin levels than nonsmoking mothers
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Public Health Implications Assist pregnant women who wish to stop smoking Helping mothers to quit smoking: should increase breastfeeding duration Breastfeeding support programs
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