Title |
Associations between maternal health literacy, neonatal health and breastfeeding outcomes in the early postpartum period / |
Authors |
Gaupšienė, Alma ; Vainauskaitė, Aistė ; Baglajeva, Jekaterina ; Stukas, Rimantas ; Ramašauskaitė, Diana ; Paliulytė, Virginija ; Istomina, Natalja |
DOI |
10.18332/ejm/170161 |
Full Text |
|
Is Part of |
European journal of midwifery.. Heraklion : European Publishing. 2023, vol. 7, art. no. 25, p. [1-6].. ISSN 2585-2906 |
Keywords [eng] |
health literacy ; antenatal health ; newborn health ; breastfeeding |
Abstract [eng] |
Introduction: Maternal health literacy is a social skill that is relevant to successful postnatal newborn adaptation, neonatal feeding, and neonatal health outcomes, given the importance of maternal health literacy in newborn healthcare. The study aims to identify and assess the associations between maternal health literacy, neonatal health, and breastfeeding outcomes during the early postpartum period. Methods: Five hundred women who gave birth to full-term newborns at Vilnius University Hospital were invited to the study from 1 May to 30 September 2022. The 47 questions of the European Health Literacy Questionnaire (HLS-EU-Q47) were used to assess maternal health literacy on days 2 and 3 after birth. Each subject’s health literacy indices were divided into four categories: inadequate, problematic, sufficient, and excellent. The neonatal health indicators were birth weight and height, along with the APGAR score and the outcomes of feeding either exclusively with breast milk or with adapted formula in addition to breastfeeding. Results: Most women who participated in the survey had insufficient or problematic health literacy (69%). The study showed that women’s higher health literacy is associated with a lower risk of obesity, a healthier diet, regular physical activity, and a higher birth weight and height of their newborns (p<0.05). Mothers with inadequate/problematic health literacy were more likely to feed their newborns with adapted formula in addition to breastfeeding. Conclusions: Women’s health literacy is a factor that affects women’s healthy lifestyle choices before and during pregnancy and is significant for newborns’ health indicators. |
Published |
Heraklion : European Publishing |
Type |
Journal article |
Language |
English |
Publication date |
2023 |
CC license |
|