Maternal factors associated
with the duration of breast feeding in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Sherine Shawky and Bahaa A.
Abalkhail
Summary
Recently, there has been increasing concern about the decline in
breast-feeding pattern in developing countries. The objectives of this
study were to document the recent breast-feeding trends in Jeddah during
the first year of an infant's life and identify the probable maternal
risk factors implicated in breast-feeding cessation. Data were collected
from six randomly selected primary health care centres in Jeddah City.
All married women with an infant
12 completed months of age were interviewed, and information on
socio-demographic characteristics, breast feeding and contraceptive use
were collected. Cox proportional hazard regression model was used to
calculate the adjusted odds ratios for the various maternal risk factors
related to breast-feeding cessation.
A total of 400 women were enrolled in the study. Their mean age at
delivery was 28.0 years (SD = 4.1 years). Approximately 40.0% had never
attended school, 43.0% had at least five children and 13.8% were
smokers. Deliveries by caesarean section were reported by 13.0% of women
and contraceptive use by 44.7%, among whom oral contraceptives were the
commonest method. Around 94.0% of women ever initially breast fed their
infants, and this proportion dropped to 40.0% by the infant's 12th
month. Women who delivered by caesarean section (OR = 1.9 [95% CI 1.3,
2.8]P = 0.001) and those who used oral contraceptives (OR = 1.5
[95% CI 1.1, 2.2]P = 0.031) were at higher risk of stopping
breast feeding and lower probability of maintaining breast feeding to
the 12th month post partum than those who delivered vaginally and did
not use oral contraceptives.
Breast-feeding practice seems to decline rapidly during the first
year of the infant's life. Health care professionals should promote
breast-feeding practice as early as the antenatal period. They should
also take into consideration the impact of caesarean section deliveries
and early oral contraceptive use to avoid their negative impact on
breast-feeding practice.
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Authors:
Sherine
Shawky
Bahaa
A. Abalkhail
Affiliations
Department of Family and
Community Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Allied Sciences, King
Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
Correspondence
Correspondence:
Dr Sherine Shawky, PO Box 115, Jeddah 21411, Saudi Arabia.
E-mail:
shshawky@hotmail.com
To cite this article Shawky, Sherine & Abalkhail, Bahaa A.
Maternal factors associated with the duration of breast feeding in
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Paediatric & Perinatal Epidemiology17 (1), 91-96. doi: 10.1046/
j.1365-3016.2003.00468.x
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