Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies

The calcium supplementation status during the postpartum period among Chinese lactating women is still unclear. The objective of this study is to utilize data from two population-based prospective cohort studies to examine the calcium supplementation status and to identify whether breastfeeding is a...

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Main Authors: Jian Zhao, Yun Zhao, Colin W. Binns, Andy H. Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-10-01
Series:Nutrients
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/8/10/622
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spelling doaj-70a4c10da75142dcbc7a00a8f76cbdc42020-11-24T20:45:32ZengMDPI AGNutrients2072-66432016-10-0181062210.3390/nu8100622nu8100622Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort StudiesJian Zhao0Yun Zhao1Colin W. Binns2Andy H. Lee3School of Public Health, Curtin University, Perth 6102, AustraliaSchool of Public Health, Curtin University, Perth 6102, AustraliaSchool of Public Health, Curtin University, Perth 6102, AustraliaSchool of Public Health, Curtin University, Perth 6102, AustraliaThe calcium supplementation status during the postpartum period among Chinese lactating women is still unclear. The objective of this study is to utilize data from two population-based prospective cohort studies to examine the calcium supplementation status and to identify whether breastfeeding is associated with increased calcium supplementation among Chinese mothers after child birth. Information from 1540 mothers on breastfeeding and calcium supplementation measured at discharge, 1, 3, and 6 months postpartum were extracted to evaluate the association between breastfeeding and calcium supplementation postpartum. A generalized linear mixed model was applied to each study initially to account for the inherent correlation among repeated measurements, adjusting for socio-demographic, obstetric factors and calcium supplementation during pregnancy. In addition, breastfeeding status measured at different follow-up time points was treated as a time dependent variable in the longitudinal analysis. Furthermore, the effect sizes of the two cohort studies were pooled using fixed effect model. Based on the two cohort studies, the pooled likelihood of taking calcium supplementation postpartum among breastfeeding mothers was 4.02 times (95% confidence interval (2.30, 7.03)) higher than that of their non-breastfeeding counterparts. Dietary supplementation intervention programs targeting different subgroups should be promoted in Chinese women, given currently a wide shortage of dietary calcium intake and calcium supplementation postpartum.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/8/10/622calcium supplementationbreastfeedingpostpartuminfantnutrientsgeneralized linear mixed modeltime dependent variablepooled analysisChina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jian Zhao
Yun Zhao
Colin W. Binns
Andy H. Lee
spellingShingle Jian Zhao
Yun Zhao
Colin W. Binns
Andy H. Lee
Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies
Nutrients
calcium supplementation
breastfeeding
postpartum
infant
nutrients
generalized linear mixed model
time dependent variable
pooled analysis
China
author_facet Jian Zhao
Yun Zhao
Colin W. Binns
Andy H. Lee
author_sort Jian Zhao
title Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies
title_short Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies
title_full Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies
title_fullStr Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies
title_full_unstemmed Increased Calcium Supplementation Postpartum Is Associated with Breastfeeding among Chinese Mothers: Finding from Two Prospective Cohort Studies
title_sort increased calcium supplementation postpartum is associated with breastfeeding among chinese mothers: finding from two prospective cohort studies
publisher MDPI AG
series Nutrients
issn 2072-6643
publishDate 2016-10-01
description The calcium supplementation status during the postpartum period among Chinese lactating women is still unclear. The objective of this study is to utilize data from two population-based prospective cohort studies to examine the calcium supplementation status and to identify whether breastfeeding is associated with increased calcium supplementation among Chinese mothers after child birth. Information from 1540 mothers on breastfeeding and calcium supplementation measured at discharge, 1, 3, and 6 months postpartum were extracted to evaluate the association between breastfeeding and calcium supplementation postpartum. A generalized linear mixed model was applied to each study initially to account for the inherent correlation among repeated measurements, adjusting for socio-demographic, obstetric factors and calcium supplementation during pregnancy. In addition, breastfeeding status measured at different follow-up time points was treated as a time dependent variable in the longitudinal analysis. Furthermore, the effect sizes of the two cohort studies were pooled using fixed effect model. Based on the two cohort studies, the pooled likelihood of taking calcium supplementation postpartum among breastfeeding mothers was 4.02 times (95% confidence interval (2.30, 7.03)) higher than that of their non-breastfeeding counterparts. Dietary supplementation intervention programs targeting different subgroups should be promoted in Chinese women, given currently a wide shortage of dietary calcium intake and calcium supplementation postpartum.
topic calcium supplementation
breastfeeding
postpartum
infant
nutrients
generalized linear mixed model
time dependent variable
pooled analysis
China
url http://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/8/10/622
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AT yunzhao increasedcalciumsupplementationpostpartumisassociatedwithbreastfeedingamongchinesemothersfindingfromtwoprospectivecohortstudies
AT colinwbinns increasedcalciumsupplementationpostpartumisassociatedwithbreastfeedingamongchinesemothersfindingfromtwoprospectivecohortstudies
AT andyhlee increasedcalciumsupplementationpostpartumisassociatedwithbreastfeedingamongchinesemothersfindingfromtwoprospectivecohortstudies
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