Maternal and Child Nutrition (Apr 2022)

A nation‐wide study on the common reasons for infant formula supplementation among healthy, term, breastfed infants in US hospitals

  • Larelle H. Bookhart,
  • Erica H. Anstey,
  • Michael R. Kramer,
  • Cria G. Perrine,
  • Harumi Reis‐Reilly,
  • Usha Ramakrishnan,
  • Melissa F. Young

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/mcn.13294
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

Read online

Abstract In‐hospital infant formula supplementation of breastfed infants reduces breastfeeding duration, yet little is known about common reasons for infant formula supplementation. We examined the three most common reasons for in‐hospital infant formula supplementation of healthy, term, breastfed infants in the US reported by hospital staff. Hospital data were obtained from the 2018 Maternity Practices in Infant Nutrition and Care survey (n = 2045), which is completed by hospital staff. An open‐ended question on the top three reasons for in‐hospital infant formula supplementation was analyzed using thematic qualitative analysis and the frequencies for each reason were reported. The top three most common reasons for in‐hospital infant formula supplementation reported by hospital staff included medical indications (70.0%); maternal request/preference/feelings (55.9%); lactation management‐related issues (51.3%); physical but non‐medically indicated reasons (36.1%); social influences (18.8%); perceived cultural/societal/demographic factors (8.2%) and medical staff/institutional practices (4.7%). These findings suggest that a variety of factors should be considered to address unnecessary infant formula supplementation. Lactation management support delivered in a timely and culturally sensitive manner and targeted to mother‐infant dyads with potential medical and physical indications may reduce unnecessary in‐hospital infant formula supplementation.

Keywords