Supporting Breastmilk Feeding for Infants in Foster Care: A Scoping Review

IF 2.6 2区 医学 Q3 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Maternal and Child Nutrition Pub Date : 2025-02-10 DOI:10.1111/mcn.13810
Vicky Mitchell, Marianne White, Shona Shinwell, Camila Biazus-Dalcin
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Abstract

Worldwide, around 2.7 million children are not in the care of their parents, and access to breastmilk is often absent from foster care policies. We aimed to explore the evidence available on how foster families, health and social workers and mothers with infants in care can be supported in providing breastfeeding and expressed breastmilk (EBM), and to identify barriers and facilitators for breastfeeding and EMB in foster care. The JBI methodology for scoping reviews was used. Three academic databases and grey literature were searched in March 2023, and data extraction charts were used. The findings were synthesised using thematic analysis. In total, 11 papers were included, 5 peer-reviewed papers and 6 from the grey literature. Five themes were identified in the analysis: ‘Is this safe?’, ‘Substance use: Protecting the breastfeeding rights of mothers and infants’, ‘Making milk accessible through breastfeeding and EBM’, ‘Where are the policies’? and ‘Attitudes around breastfeeding’. The findings showed concern from foster parents around the safety of breastmilk and the challenges of supporting breastmilk provision when infants are in foster care. Training, positive attitudes and multi-disciplinary team involvement can support breastfeeding and the breastfeeding rights for infants in foster care. Health and social care professionals who support mothers and foster families with breastfeeding and EBM feeding lack knowledge and guidance in how to do this safely and with a rights-based approach. We found that facilitating breastfeeding is not prioritised when an infant is placed into foster care and that the breastfeeding rights of mothers and infants require urgent attention in policies and guidelines to facilitate safe and person-centred infant feeding.

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支持母乳喂养的婴儿寄养:范围审查。
在世界范围内,约有270万儿童没有得到父母的照顾,而且在寄养政策中往往没有提供母乳。我们的目的是探索如何支持寄养家庭、卫生和社会工作者以及照顾婴儿的母亲提供母乳喂养和母乳表达(EBM)的现有证据,并确定寄养中母乳喂养和EMB的障碍和促进因素。使用了JBI方法进行范围审查。检索了2023年3月的三个学术数据库和灰色文献,采用数据提取图。这些发现是通过主题分析来综合的。共纳入论文11篇,同行评议论文5篇,灰色文献6篇。分析中确定了五个主题:“这安全吗?”,“物质使用:保护母亲和婴儿的母乳喂养权利”,“通过母乳喂养和循证医学获得母乳”,“政策在哪里”?以及“对母乳喂养的态度”。研究结果表明,寄养父母对母乳的安全性以及在婴儿寄养时支持母乳喂养的挑战感到担忧。培训、积极态度和多学科团队参与可以支持母乳喂养和寄养婴儿的母乳喂养权利。通过母乳喂养和循证医学喂养支持母亲和寄养家庭的卫生和社会保健专业人员缺乏知识和指导,不知道如何以基于权利的方式安全做到这一点。我们发现,当婴儿被安置在寄养中心时,促进母乳喂养并不是优先考虑的问题,母亲和婴儿的母乳喂养权利迫切需要在政策和指导方针中得到关注,以促进安全和以人为本的婴儿喂养。
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来源期刊
Maternal and Child Nutrition
Maternal and Child Nutrition 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
8.80%
发文量
144
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Maternal & Child Nutrition addresses fundamental aspects of nutrition and its outcomes in women and their children, both in early and later life, and keeps its audience fully informed about new initiatives, the latest research findings and innovative ways of responding to changes in public attitudes and policy. Drawing from global sources, the Journal provides an invaluable source of up to date information for health professionals, academics and service users with interests in maternal and child nutrition. Its scope includes pre-conception, antenatal and postnatal maternal nutrition, women''s nutrition throughout their reproductive years, and fetal, neonatal, infant, child and adolescent nutrition and their effects throughout life.
期刊最新文献
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