Development of a complex intervention to strengthen municipality-based breastfeeding support to reduced social inequity in breastfeeding.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Ingrid Nilsson, Marianne Busck-Rasmussen, Sarah Fredsted Villadsen
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Breastfeeding is the ideal nutrition for infants and protects infants and mothers from a range of adverse health outcomes during their lifespan. In Denmark, while the breastfeeding initiation rate is high, only 14% of mothers meet the World Health Organization's recommendation of exclusive breastfeeding at six months. Furthermore, a notable social inequity exists among those who achieve this recommendation. Knowledge of effective interventions to reduce breastfeeding inequity is limited. A previous hospital-based intervention succeeded in increasing breastfeeding duration. However, most breastfeeding support is provided in Danish municipalities by health visitors. This called for adapting the intervention to the health visiting program and developing an intensified intervention addressing the social inequity in breastfeeding. This article describes the adaptation and development process of a municipality-based intervention.

Methods: During a 15-month period in 2020-21, the municipal intervention was iteratively developed using a three-stage framework for developing complex health interventions described by Hawkins et al. The three stages were 1) need assessment and stakeholder consultation, 2) co-production and 3) prototyping. The process was inspired by O'Cathain et al.'s principles for a user-centred, co-created and theory- and evidence-based approach, involving parents and health visitors.

Results: In stage 1, we identified the needs and priorities of the target groups of the intervention. In stage 2, the intervention was developed through action research design and inspired by Duus' 'learning cycles' as the method to enhance motivation and ownership and to strengthen the implementation process by creating a joint room for learning and reflection with health visitors and developers. In stage 3, the intervention was tested for feasibility and usefulness during a 2.5-month period accompanied by monthly dialogue meetings with health visitors and developers. In this period, the intervention was refined based on the gathered experiences and was subsequently prepared for evaluation.

Conclusion: The description of the development of this complex intervention, aimed at increasing breastfeeding duration and reducing inequity, offers breastfeeding practitioners and researchers a transparent foundation for continuously improving breastfeeding support and a methodology for complex intervention development.

Trial registration: Registered at Clinical Trials NCT05311631.

制定复杂的干预措施,加强以城市为基础的母乳喂养支持,减少母乳喂养中的社会不平等。
背景:母乳喂养是婴儿最理想的营养方式,可保护婴儿和母亲在一生中免受一系列不良健康后果的影响。在丹麦,虽然母乳喂养的开始率很高,但只有 14% 的母亲达到了世界卫生组织建议的 6 个月纯母乳喂养的标准。此外,在达到这一建议的人群中还存在着明显的社会不平等。有关减少母乳喂养不平等现象的有效干预措施的知识十分有限。之前一项以医院为基础的干预措施成功地延长了母乳喂养时间。然而,在丹麦各城市,大多数母乳喂养支持都是由健康访视员提供的。这就需要对干预措施进行调整,使其适应健康访视计划,并针对母乳喂养中的社会不平等问题制定强化干预措施。本文介绍了基于市镇的干预措施的调整和发展过程:在 2020-21 年的 15 个月期间,采用 Hawkins 等人描述的开发复杂健康干预措施的三阶段框架,反复开发了市级干预措施。这一过程受到了 O'Cathain 等人关于以用户为中心、共同创造、以理论和证据为基础的方法原则的启发,家长和健康访视者也参与其中:在第一阶段,我们确定了干预措施目标群体的需求和优先事项。在第二阶段,我们通过行动研究设计开发了干预措施,并从杜斯的 "学习周期 "中得到启发,将其作为提高积极性和自主性的方法,并通过与健康访视员和开发人员共同创建学习和反思空间来加强实施过程。在第三阶段,在为期 2.5 个月的时间里,对干预措施的可行性和实用性进行了测试,同时每月与健康访视者和开发人员举行对话会议。在此期间,根据收集到的经验对干预措施进行了改进,随后准备进行评估:对这一旨在延长母乳喂养时间和减少不平等的复杂干预措施的开发过程的描述,为母乳喂养从业人员和研究人员提供了一个透明的基础,以不断改进母乳喂养支持和复杂干预措施的开发方法:注册于临床试验 NCT05311631。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Archives of Public Health
Archives of Public Health Medicine-Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
3.00%
发文量
244
审稿时长
16 weeks
期刊介绍: rchives of Public Health is a broad scope public health journal, dedicated to publishing all sound science in the field of public health. The journal aims to better the understanding of the health of populations. The journal contributes to public health knowledge, enhances the interaction between research, policy and practice and stimulates public health monitoring and indicator development. The journal considers submissions on health outcomes and their determinants, with clear statements about the public health and policy implications. Archives of Public Health welcomes methodological papers (e.g., on study design and bias), papers on health services research, health economics, community interventions, and epidemiological studies dealing with international comparisons, the determinants of inequality in health, and the environmental, behavioural, social, demographic and occupational correlates of health and diseases.
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