2018
DOI: 10.1111/birt.12338
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Breastfeeding and the substance‐exposed mother and baby

Abstract: The findings highlight the feasibility of tailored breastfeeding support for the substance-exposed mother and baby and endorse the promotion and support of breastfeeding for this group. Future research should include a statistically powered randomized controlled trial to evaluate clinical efficacy.

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Cited by 28 publications
(31 citation statements)
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“…For babies, EBF was identified such as healthier eating habits, reduced length of hospital stay, favorable weight increase, lower body mass index, lower adiposity, lower total cholesterol values, better cognitive and behavioral development, as well as stability of metabolic levels in children with metabolic disorders. Meanwhile, for mothers, EBF can protect mothers from the risk of ovarian and breast cancer because it is a portion of safe baby food and also reduces obesity (MacVicar, Humphrey and Forbes-McKay, 2018;Fan et al, 2019;Couto, Dias and Oliveira, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For babies, EBF was identified such as healthier eating habits, reduced length of hospital stay, favorable weight increase, lower body mass index, lower adiposity, lower total cholesterol values, better cognitive and behavioral development, as well as stability of metabolic levels in children with metabolic disorders. Meanwhile, for mothers, EBF can protect mothers from the risk of ovarian and breast cancer because it is a portion of safe baby food and also reduces obesity (MacVicar, Humphrey and Forbes-McKay, 2018;Fan et al, 2019;Couto, Dias and Oliveira, 2020).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Breastfeeding and the provision of breast milk containing substitution medication is well evidenced as a supportive practice which improves neonatal outcomes and increases maternal satisfaction . In this review, only three quality initiatives encouraged breastfeeding and there was suboptimal practitioner compliance to giving expressed breast milk when mothers were not present.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Valuing parents as direct caregivers has been shown to positively affect self‐efficacy and promote parenting skills . Previous research identifies that a negative influence on maternal perceptions of self‐worth is the feeling of guilt and responsibility associated with substance use in pregnancy . This review, however, highlighted that family integrated care was not wholly endorsed and was met with resistance by some practitioners.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…Since studies on research recruitment of women with SUD were limited, the search was broadened to include research recruitment of people who use drugs (PWUD). Ten studies were relevant; seven in international settings (Boucher et al, 2017;Brown et al, 2019;Grové, 2019;MacVicar, Humphrey, & Forbes-McKay, 2018;Sirdifield, Owens, & Brooker, 2016;Thong, Ulph, Barrowclough, & Gregg, 2019;Thornton, Harris, Baker, Johnson, & Kay-Lambkin, 2016) and three in the United States (Ballard, Cooper, & Young, 2019;Batista et al, 2016;Ryan, Smeltzer, & Sharts-Hopko, 2019). The literature emphasized individual factors as prominent challenges regarding research recruitment of women with SUD and PWUD.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Participants desired personal contact to build rapport with researchers (Thong et al, 2019). Investigators explained that their ability to relate to participants based on similarities in culture, race, or medical diagnosis was foundational for successful recruitment (Boucher et al, 2017;MacVicar et al, 2018). Other researchers suggested including community members in research projects as they share the cultural and social needs of the study population (Batista et al, 2016;Brown et al, 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%