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Home Based Peer Support Program for Mothers With Low Breastfeeding Self-efficacy (BFPS)

The University of Hong Kong (HKU) logo

The University of Hong Kong (HKU)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breastfeeding

Treatments

Behavioral: Online Home-based peer support

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

An online home-based breastfeeding peer support programme is proposed to support mothers who are giving birth to their first-born. This study aims to evaluate the effectiveness of this programme in improving breastfeeding practices among women with low breastfeeding self-efficacy. It is hypothesized that participants who received online home-based peer support will exclusively breastfeed for longer duration, have higher breastfeeding self-efficacy, and lower post-partum depression symptoms when compared to those receiving only standard care.

Full description

Primiparous mothers who plan to breastfeed but did not go on to breastfeed often face high levels of emotional and psychological challenges in their transition to parenthood. This can adversely affect their breastfeeding experiences and general well-being, and is associated with stress, anxiety, and postnatal depression. While family psycho-education and other supportive group programmes are available in health services, they require face-to-face education sessions over a long interval, high engagement, and trusting relationships, and thus often result in low attendance and high drop outs.

Mothers have expressed the need for psychological support of peer counsellors, which would allow them to support each other. The first month postpartum is a critical period for sustaining exclusive breastfeeding and the time when mothers are at high risk of postpartum depression. For Chinese mothers in Hong Kong, however, they are often housebound during this period due to the tradition of "doing the month", and thus often find it difficult to attend support groups or seek help. In view of these challenges and the pandemic wave faced by primiparous mothers, they are reluctant with home visits, therefore an online delivery of the home-based peer support programme is proposed.

This randomized control trial adopts a two-arm design to examine the effectiveness of an online home-based peer support programme for women with low breastfeeding self-efficacy. It is hypothesized that those receiving the intervention, when compared to the controls, will have (1) longer period of exclusive breastfeeding, (2) higher postnatal breastfeeding self-efficacy, and (3) lower post-partum depressive symptoms.

Enrollment

442 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Primiparous mothers
  • Intend to breastfeed
  • Have low breastfeeding self-efficacy (between 14 to 32)
  • Have singleton pregnancy and live birth
  • Have term infant (37-42 weeks gestational)
  • Cantonese speaking
  • Hong Kong resident
  • Have no serious medical or obstetrical complications

Exclusion criteria

  • Infant is <37 week gestation
  • Infant has Apgar score <8 at five minutes
  • Infant has birthweight <2,500 grams
  • Infant has any severe medical conditions or congenital malformations
  • Infant is placed in the special care baby unit for more than 48 hours after birth
  • Infant is placed in the neonatal intensive care unit at any time after birth

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

442 participants in 2 patient groups

Online Home-based peer support intervention
Experimental group
Description:
Participants will receive intervention on top of standard usual care.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Online Home-based peer support
Standard usual care
No Intervention group
Description:
Participants will receive standard usual care.

Trial documents
1

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Central trial contact

Kris YW Lok, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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