Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report

A randomized control trial was conducted at the Coronation Hospital, to evaluate the effect of audiovisual breastfeeding education. Within 72 hours after delivery, 340 women who agreed to participate were allocated randomly to view one of two video programmes, one of which dealt with breastfeeding....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: V. C. Nikodem, G. J. Hofmeyr, T. R. Kramer, A. M. Gülmezoglu, A. Anderson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 1993-03-01
Series:Curationis
Online Access:https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1418
id doaj-bb0ea4cb4609420da28965f45d209dcb
record_format Article
spelling doaj-bb0ea4cb4609420da28965f45d209dcb2020-11-24T20:49:16ZengAOSISCurationis0379-85772223-62791993-03-0116460631181Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary reportV. C. NikodemG. J. HofmeyrT. R. KramerA. M. GülmezogluA. AndersonA randomized control trial was conducted at the Coronation Hospital, to evaluate the effect of audiovisual breastfeeding education. Within 72 hours after delivery, 340 women who agreed to participate were allocated randomly to view one of two video programmes, one of which dealt with breastfeeding. To determine the effect of the programme on infant feeding a structured questionnaire was administered to 108 women who attended the six week postnatal check-up. Alternative methods, such as telephonic interviews (24) and home visits (30) were used to obtain information from subjects who did not attend the postnatal clinic. Comparisons of mother-infant relationships and postpartum depression showed no significant differences. Similar proportions of each group reported that their baby was easy to manage, and that they felt close to and could communicate well with it. While the overall number of mothers who breast-fed was not significantly different between the two groups, there was a trend towards fewer mothers in the study group supplementing with bottle feeding. It was concluded that the effectiveness of aidiovisual education alone is limited, and attention should be directed towards personal follow-up and support for breastfeeding mothers.https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1418
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author V. C. Nikodem
G. J. Hofmeyr
T. R. Kramer
A. M. Gülmezoglu
A. Anderson
spellingShingle V. C. Nikodem
G. J. Hofmeyr
T. R. Kramer
A. M. Gülmezoglu
A. Anderson
Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report
Curationis
author_facet V. C. Nikodem
G. J. Hofmeyr
T. R. Kramer
A. M. Gülmezoglu
A. Anderson
author_sort V. C. Nikodem
title Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report
title_short Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report
title_full Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report
title_fullStr Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report
title_full_unstemmed Audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: A preliminary report
title_sort audiovisual education and breastfeeding practices: a preliminary report
publisher AOSIS
series Curationis
issn 0379-8577
2223-6279
publishDate 1993-03-01
description A randomized control trial was conducted at the Coronation Hospital, to evaluate the effect of audiovisual breastfeeding education. Within 72 hours after delivery, 340 women who agreed to participate were allocated randomly to view one of two video programmes, one of which dealt with breastfeeding. To determine the effect of the programme on infant feeding a structured questionnaire was administered to 108 women who attended the six week postnatal check-up. Alternative methods, such as telephonic interviews (24) and home visits (30) were used to obtain information from subjects who did not attend the postnatal clinic. Comparisons of mother-infant relationships and postpartum depression showed no significant differences. Similar proportions of each group reported that their baby was easy to manage, and that they felt close to and could communicate well with it. While the overall number of mothers who breast-fed was not significantly different between the two groups, there was a trend towards fewer mothers in the study group supplementing with bottle feeding. It was concluded that the effectiveness of aidiovisual education alone is limited, and attention should be directed towards personal follow-up and support for breastfeeding mothers.
url https://curationis.org.za/index.php/curationis/article/view/1418
work_keys_str_mv AT vcnikodem audiovisualeducationandbreastfeedingpracticesapreliminaryreport
AT gjhofmeyr audiovisualeducationandbreastfeedingpracticesapreliminaryreport
AT trkramer audiovisualeducationandbreastfeedingpracticesapreliminaryreport
AT amgulmezoglu audiovisualeducationandbreastfeedingpracticesapreliminaryreport
AT aanderson audiovisualeducationandbreastfeedingpracticesapreliminaryreport
_version_ 1716806157417316352