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Perceived pressure to breastfeed negatively impacts postpartum mental health outcomes over time

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posted on 2025-03-04, 20:59 authored by Rebecca GrattanRebecca Grattan, SM London, GE Bueno
Introduction: Positive maternal mental health is associated with improved outcomes for infants, and yet the consideration of maternal mental health is often neglected in breastfeeding interventions. Breastfeeding interventions typically focus on breastfeeding promotion, and do not always include supports for the mother. This may result in isolated perceived pressure to breastfeed, the mental health impacts of which are not well understood. Methods: This mixed-methods, longitudinal study examined whether perceived pressure to breastfeed was associated with depression, suicide ideation, anxiety, birth trauma and stress concurrently and 4 weeks later for postpartum mothers. It also examined qualitative experiences of feeding. Results: Perceived pressure to breastfeed was associated with increased anxiety, stress and birth trauma symptoms four weeks later. Thematic analysis suggested this may be due to difficulties living up to the “breast is best” ideal, believing breastfeeding was part of success as a mother, lack of choices and autonomy in feeding choices for infants and general lack of support. Discussion: As such it appears we may be doing more harm than good by focusing our interventions for breastfeeding primarily on increasing pressure to breastfeed, and interventions should consider strategies for promoting positive maternal mental health alongside breastfeeding.

History

Preferred citation

Grattan, R. E., London, S. M. & Bueno, G. E. (2024). Perceived pressure to breastfeed negatively impacts postpartum mental health outcomes over time. Frontiers in Public Health, 12, 1357965-. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1357965

Journal title

Frontiers in Public Health

Volume

12

Publication date

2024-01-01

Pagination

1357965

Publisher

Frontiers Media SA

Publication status

Published

Online publication date

2024-04-04

ISSN

2296-2565

eISSN

2296-2565

Language

en