As a global public health recommendation of the WHO(1), infants should be exclusively breast-fed for the first 6 months of life and with continued breast-feeding for 2 years and beyond. There is strong scientific evidence of short- and long-term health benefits of breast-feeding in infants, as well as the advantages for the mothers, the health-care system and the society(Reference Horta, Bahl and Martines2–Reference Agostoni, Braegger and Decsi6). Due to a number of complex lifestyle and cultural factors, and in some cases biological reasons(Reference Amir and Donath7), breast-feeding rates around the world seldom achieve the recommended level(8).
The Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI) is proven to increase breast-feeding duration and prevalence(Reference Cattaneo and Buzzetti9–Reference Merten, Dratva and Ackermann-Liebrich11). One of the ten steps of the BFHI states that newborn infants should not be given food or drinks other than breast milk unless medically indicated (http://www.babyfriendly.org.uk). The effect of supplemental fluids or feedings during the first days of life on the duration of total and exclusive breast-feeding remains uncertain due to the lack of adequate evidence(Reference Szajewska, Horvath and Koletzko12). The feeding during the first days on the maternity ward is rarely taken into account when reporting the duration of exclusive breast-feeding(8, Reference Walburg, Goehlich and Conquet13–Reference Ludvigsson and Ludvigsson17). There is a definite need to develop simple, valid and reliable tools to measure infant feeding including the feeding on the maternity ward(Reference Ruel, Brown and Caulfield18). The problem of measurement arises primarily because infant feeding practices encompass a series of age-specific, interrelated behaviours that are difficult to summarise into one or even a few variables.
Social class differences in diet and health are seen at all ages starting in early life. Risk factors including lack of breast-feeding, smoking, physical inactivity, obesity and unhealthy diet are clustered in the lower socio-economic groups(Reference James, Nelson and Ralph19). Food preferences are strongly influenced by social, demographic and lifestyle factors related to the family, particularly to the mother(Reference Birsch20). Social factors determining the initiation and duration of breast-feeding are often studied separately. In industrialised countries, children of well-educated, older and non-smoking mothers come closer to meeting the recommended feeding practices(Reference Walburg, Goehlich and Conquet13–Reference Ludvigsson and Ludvigsson17, Reference Grjibovski, Ehrenblad and Yngve21–Reference Kruse, Denk and Feldman-Winter26). The impact of other family characteristics has been more controversial.
In the present study, we had the aim to assess the type and determinants of milk feeding on the maternity ward and during the first 2 years, among 5993 infants participating a population-based birth cohort study. The objective was also to evaluate the validity of the 3-month questionnaire in measuring hospital feeding.
Subjects and methods
The subjects in the present study were recruited from the Type 1 Diabetes Prediction and Prevention Study (DIPP) cohort (http://www.dipp.fi). All newborn infants with human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-conferred susceptibility to type 1 diabetes are recruited from the university hospital areas of Turku, Oulu and Tampere. The nutrition study was initiated within the framework of the DIPP project in Oulu and Tampere(Reference Virtanen, Kenward and Erkkola27). That study aims at examining the effect of maternal diet during pregnancy and lactation in line with the child’s diet during infancy and childhood on the development of type 1 diabetes, allergic diseases and asthma. The present study was approved by the Ethics Committee of the participating hospitals. The present series comprises the at-risk children born between 2 September 1996 and 31 August 2004 in Oulu University Hospital and between 20 October 1997 and 5 September 2004 in Tampere University Hospital. A total of 5993 subjects (77 % of the children invited) in the present study comprised children whose parents had returned at least one of the study questionnaires during the first follow-up year (characteristics presented in Table 1). From a questionnaire completed at 3 months after delivery, the following information was obtained: parents’ age, basic and vocational education, occupation and the number of siblings. Data on duration of gestation, mode of delivery, birth weight and length and maternal smoking during pregnancy were obtained from the Medical Birth Registries of the Oulu and Tampere University Hospitals.
†Median (range); if the child was still breast-fed at the age of 2 years, 25 months was marked as the duration of total breast-feeding. P-values based on Mann–Whitney and Kruskal–Wallis tests. Class of missing values not taken into account in the analysis.
‡At the time of the birth of the child.
Substudy on validity of questions on infant feeding on the maternity ward in the 3-month questionnaire
Altogether, 120 subjects were randomly selected from the cohort of children born in Oulu University Hospital by taking 20 subjects from each cohort year from 1997 to 2002. From the questionnaire completed at 3 months after delivery, the following information concerning the feeding on the maternity ward was obtained: days spent in hospital after birth and type (breast milk, donated breast milk and/or infant formula) and the brand name of any milk given in the hospital. The questionnaire was mainly completed by the mother; only two forms were completed by the father. Information on feeding reported in hospital records (the delivery report and the nursing plan) was collected and used as a gold standard. The data included information on the type and duration (days) of oral feeding on the maternity ward. Three children were excluded because of missing hospital records. Among the subjects, 56 % were boys and 44 % girls.
Dietary and background data collection
Structured dietary questionnaire
Data on infant feeding were obtained from questionnaires completed when the child was 3 months, 6 months, 1 year and 2 years of age. In the 3-month dietary questionnaire, the details of the feeding on the maternity ward was asked: whether the child was breast-fed, had received donated breast milk, was exposed to infant formula and if so to which formula. The respondent was also asked to name the most frequently given milk in the hospital with the possibility to name more than one option. At the age of 3 months all the food items the infant had so far received were carefully recorded in the questionnaire. All questionnaires asked for the duration of breast-feeding and the age at introduction and brand names of all infant formulas that the child had received as well as the age at introduction of cow’s milk and cow’s milk products. The brand name of the infant formula was recorded and the formulas were later classified as regular cow’s milk-based, special (hydrolysed) or soya-based. Trained study nurses checked the questionnaires during the respective visits.
Follow-up form
During the first 2 years of life the family was asked to complete continuously at home the ‘age at introduction of new foods’ form, developed by the DIPP nutrition research group. Parents were asked to mark down on the dietary follow-up form the age when the infant started to receive various supplementary foods (including taste portions of food). The age of the infant, when exclusive and total breast-feeding was stopped, was added by a study nurse during the interview. The follow-up form was completed at home, and it was checked at every visit (at 3, 6, 9, 12, 18 and 24 months) and the information was transferred to the dietary database.
Definitions
Exclusive breast-feeding was defined as the period during which the child received, in addition to breast milk (own mother’s milk or donated breast milk), only drops of water and/or vitamin/mineral supplements (mainly vitamin D starting 2 weeks after delivery). Feeding on the maternity ward was taken into account when calculating the duration of exclusive breast-feeding. If the child had been given infant formula on the maternity ward, he/she was not considered as being exclusively breast-fed any more. Total breast-feeding was defined as the period during which the child received breast milk. From 1996 to 2003, the WHO recommended 4–6 months of exclusive breast-feeding(28). During the last years of data collection (2003–2004), the new recommendation of 6 months’ exclusive breast-feeding was set by the WHO(1).
Data analysis
Median and range were used to describe the duration of breast-feeding. Differences in feeding patterns due to selected maternal and infant characteristics were analysed with the non-parametric Mann–Whitney and Kruskal–Wallis tests. The χ 2 test was used to test the differences in proportions between groups. The relative agreement between the 3-month questionnaire and hospital records was examined by proportion of subjects classified into the same categories of milk feeding by both methods. For comparisons between the duration of exclusive breast-feeding with and without taking into account the information on hospital feeding, the Wilcoxon signed-rank test was used. A Cox regression analysis was applied to study the duration of exclusive and total breast-feeding, and age at introduction of regular cow’s milk in relation to selected maternal and infant characteristics. The endpoints were determined as duration of exclusive breast-feeding less than 4 months v. 4 months or more, duration of total breast-feeding less than 12 months v. 12 months and introducing regular cow’s milk before 12 months v. 12 months or more. Logistic regression was used to analyse additional milk feeding on the maternity ward (yes/no) in relation to background characteristics. Evidence from the literature and, accordingly, associations found in the present study were used to decide which variables were chosen into the final multivariate models. Infant and maternal characteristics were categorised as shown in Table 1. The SPSS for Windows statistical software package version 15·0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA) was used for the statistical analyses.
Results
Family characteristics
The characteristics of the participating infants are presented in Table 1. The mean birth weight of the children was 3537 g (sd 573) ranging from 680 to 5890 g. The average stay in the hospital after birth was 4 d (range 0–200). The average age of all mothers at the time of delivery was 29·4 (sd 5·3) years. Among the mothers, 2 % were younger than 20 years, and 18 % were 35 years or older. The 3-month dietary questionnaire was returned by 5558 (93 %), the 6-month questionnaire by 4964 (83 %), the 1-year questionnaire by 4451 (74 %) and the 2-year questionnaire by 3698 (62 %) families.
Infant feeding in the delivery hospital
Breast milk was the main milk given on the maternity ward (Table 2). Altogether, 99 % of the children for whom we had data on feeding on the maternity ward (n 5558, 93 % of all the children) received breast milk from the mother either on its own or in combination with something else during the stay in the hospital after the delivery. The combination of breast milk and donated breast milk was the most common combination (Table 2). Altogether, 80 % of the women (n 5558) recalled their child being fed supplementary milk (donated breast milk or infant formula) on the maternity ward during the first days after delivery. Of the women, 76 % (n 4214) reported that the given milk was donated breast milk, 12 % (n 642) reported that it was infant formula and 12 % (n 660) could not name the type of the given milk.
† The respondent was asked to name the most frequently given milk in the hospital with the possibility to name more than one option.
‡ n 5558; the ones for whom data available on infant feeding at the maternity hospital. Altogether 200 subjects did not answer the questions on the type of milk mainly given in the maternity hospital.
Validity of questions on infant feeding on the maternity ward in the 3-month questionnaire
The degree of misclassification across different milk types between the 3-month questionnaire and hospital records was examined by cross-classification of reported milk types based on both data sources (Table 3). Altogether, 78 % of milk types given on the maternity ward fell into the same class, according to both sources of information. There were, altogether, nineteen infants (16 %) in whom a discrepancy in the feeding history between two data sources was found, and seven (6 %) babies for whom the mother could not name the milk types given on the maternity ward (these were marked as ‘milk type unknown’). The greatest misclassifications in milk feeding were found for the combination of breast milk, donated milk and formula (five out of eight (63 %) in a wrong group) and for the group of breast milk only (five out of nine (55 %) in a wrong group).
† Pearson χ 2, P < 0·001; proportion classified in the same class 78 %.
Exclusive and total breast-feeding
According to the 3-month questionnaire, thirty-one (0·6 %) of the infants were never breast-fed. At 1 month of age, the proportion of breast-fed infants was 92 %, decreasing from 72 % at 4 months to 58 % at 6 months (Fig. 1). Some form of breast-feeding continued until the end of the first year in 18 % of the infants. The proportion of exclusively breast-fed infants was 56 % at 1 month, and then rapidly decreased from 32 % at 3 months to 20 % at 4 months and 1 % at 6 months (Fig. 1). Additional information on feeding in the delivery hospital changed the observed duration of exclusive breast-feeding (P < 0·001 in Wilcoxon signed-ranks test). Median duration of exclusive breast-feeding, however, was the same in both: 1·4 months (range 0–8) when taking or not taking into account the information asked about delivery hospital feeding.
Milk feeding
Type/s of milk consumed during the previous week was asked in the 3-month questionnaire, and the main milk feeding was asked in all the subsequent questionnaires. Only a few infants consumed regularly cow’s milk already during the first 3 months (Table 4). Low fat milk (1 %–1·5 % fat) was the most commonly given regular milk, and its use as a main milk drink increased rapidly from 0·1 % at the age of 3 months to 65 % at the age of 2 years. Regular infant formula was still commonly used (by 37 % of infants) as the main milk type at the age of 1 year. Regular cow’s milk (liquid milk or icecream) was introduced at a median age of 10·5 months (range 0·23–25 months). Timing of the introduction of cow’s milk products (infant formula included) was strongly associated with the duration of breast-feeding, the Spearman correlation with the duration of exclusive breast-feeding being 0·89 and that of total breast-feeding 0·53. The use of special and soya-based formulas peaked at the age of 1 year and decreased thereafter. The results on weaning other foods will be presented in a separate manuscript.
† Main milk feeding asked at all age points other than at the age of 3 months, when type/s of milk used during the previous week was asked in the questionnaire. More than one option could be given.
‡ Includes hydrolysed formulas, premature formulas and other special formulas.
Factors associated with milk feeding
Several sociodemographic variables were strongly associated with the infants’ milk feeding (Table 5). Additional milk feeding on the maternity ward was associated with a greater risk of short duration of both exclusive and total breast-feeding. The odds of additional milk feeding on the maternity ward were higher for children born by Caesarean section, delivered before the gestational age of 39 weeks, born in Northern Finland, having a mother 25 years-old or older and being the first-born in the family (Table 5). In a bit over-simplistic terms: in order to endow a Finnish infant with the best odds for long duration of both exclusive and total breast-feeding and late introduction of regular cow’s milk, one should be a third child of well-educated parents from Southern Finland with the mother being a non-smoker and 30 years or older, and to be vaginally delivered after the gestational age of 39 weeks.
HR, hazard ratio.
* P < 0·05 for significant OR/HR and their 95 % CI. **P < 0·01 for significant OR/HR and their 95 % CI.
† The models included all covariates presented in the table except for feeding at the maternity hospital in the model having additional milk feeding on the maternity ward as the endpoint.
‡ Missing information: number of siblings 196 (3 %), maternal basic education 254 (4 %), paternal professional education 321 (5 %), route of delivery 53 (1 %), maternal smoking during pregnancy 213 (4 %), gestational age 67 (1 %), birth weight 53 (1 %), feeding at the maternity hospital 453 (7 %).
Discussion
In the present study, breast-feeding on the maternity ward and overall milk feeding during the first 2 years of life among 5993 Finnish infants was assessed. Despite the fact that the majority of mothers initiated breast-feeding, 80 % of infants were given supplementary milk (donated breast milk or infant formula) during their stay in the maternity hospital. The worldwide goals for the duration of breast-feeding have not yet been achieved in Finland. The infant feeding is strongly influenced by sociodemographic determinants and feeding practices on the maternity wards, with high parental education, older maternal age, greater number of siblings, having a non-smoking mother and being exclusively breast-fed on the maternity ward predicting longer duration of both exclusive and partial breast feeding. Our 3-month questionnaire, which was assessed against delivery hospital records, was found to be a reasonably good method for assessing the delivery hospital feeding of the infants.
As many as 80 % of the infants received supplementary milk on the maternity ward. Only 12 % of the infants were given infant formula, donated milk being the dominant type of supplementary milk. Consistently with earlier studies(Reference Kramer, Chalmers and Hodnett10, Reference Blomquist, Jonsbo and Serenius29), supplementary feeding on the maternity ward, and infant formula in particular, was a strong determinant of short duration of exclusive and total breast-feeding. The present results on hospital feeding raise a question whether almost routinely given supplementary milk is actually needed in most circumstances. Our observations indicate that a change in the feeding practices towards avoidance of supplementary milk on the maternity wards could potentially increase the duration of breast-feeding. Except for Austria and Finland, the number of Baby Friendly Hospitals and the proportion of infants born in Baby Friendly Hospitals have increased everywhere in Europe(30). It has been shown that training for the BFHI leads to better hospital practice and higher breast-feeding rates in high-income countries with a modern health-care system(Reference Kramer, Chalmers and Hodnett10).
There is still some distance between the recommendations for infant feeding and actual feeding practices in Finland. The median duration of exclusive breast-feeding is more than 4 months shorter than the current WHO recommendation (1·4 v. 6 months)(1), and that of total breast-feeding almost half a year less than the Finnish recommendation (7 v. 12 months)(Reference Hasunen, Kalavainen and Keinonen31). When one reviews Western breast-feeding studies during the last decades, it can be appreciated that the global target of exclusive breast-feeding for 6 months has been difficult to achieve even in the form of total breast-feeding in most of the countries(Reference Cattaneo and Buzzetti9, Reference Cattaneo, Yngve and Koletzko32). However, recent trends point towards higher prevalence and duration of breast-feeding with some exceptions.
Between-study comparisons regarding the breast-feeding prevalence and duration are difficult and partly inaccurate due to discrepancies in recall methods, calculation and mode of expression. In the present study, additional information on formula feeding on the maternity ward changed the observed duration of exclusive breast-feeding. The higher the proportion of infants getting formula on the maternity ward, the bigger the overestimation in the estimates of exclusive breast-feeding if feeding on the maternity ward is not taken into account. The accuracy of breast-feeding variables is usually set according to the aims of the study, national definitions and/or international definitions. Current exclusive breast-feeding status, most commonly obtained from a 24 or 48 h recall, does not accurately represent the feeding pattern from birth, though it might provide appropriate data for describing population trends(Reference Aarts, Kylberg and Hörnell33, Reference Bland, Rollins and Solarsh34). Long-term (>6 months) recall data on exclusive breast-feeding are even more inaccurate and tend to overestimate the duration of exclusive breast-feeding(Reference Bland, Rollins and Solarsh34, Reference Huttly, Barros and Victora35). By taking feeding on the maternity ward into account when calculating the duration of exclusive breast-feeding, one could guarantee that the true picture of breast-feeding history is given.
After 6 months of age, infants were surprisingly often given cow’s milk in the form of regular milk products even though unmodified cow’s milk is believed to be unsuitable for infants until 12 months of age(Reference Michaelsen36). In Finland it is recommended that cow’s milk can be introduced gradually from the age of 10 months beginning with the introduction of sour milk products like yoghurt and curdled milk(Reference Hasunen, Kalavainen and Keinonen31). The risk of early introduction of regular cow’s milk was increased among infants having less educated parents, a young mother and a mother who smoked during pregnancy. In other studies, feeding cow’s milk earlier than recommended has been more likely among women with low education, low income and high parity(Reference Vingraite, Bartkeviciute and Michaelsen15, Reference Ummarino, Albano and De Marco24). For most of the infants, cow’s milk protein was the first foreign protein introduced when starting the use of infant formula. Early exposure to cow’s milk protein, even in the form of infant formula, can influence the composition of the intestinal microflora, which has a major influence on the development and programming of the immune system(Reference Ouwehand, Isolauri and Salminen37). There is increasing evidence that the gut-associated lymphoid tissue is involved in the development of immune-related diseases(Reference Vaarala38).
The present validity study showed that reliable data on type and time of first exposures to supplemental milks could be provided using a 3-month interval between the reference period and the recall by a questionnaire. In most of the misclassified cases, donated breast milk was misreported to be mother’s own breast milk or vice versa. Presumably, this is partly because of the responders’ misunderstanding of the importance to differentiate between breast milk from the mother and donated breast milk. However, from an epidemiological point of view it is not a serious mistake since both will be in further analysis classified into the same exposure category (breast milk). Other misclassifications were few. The proportion of mothers not knowing the type of milk given on the maternity ward, however, requires special attention. It is a noteworthy result itself, if a conspicuous proportion of mothers have not received clear information on the type of milk given to their baby.
Infant feeding is strongly influenced by sociodemographic determinants and feeding practices on the maternity wards. Sociodemographic determinants of dietary differences are seen already during pregnancy among Finns(Reference Uusitalo, Uusitalo and Ovaskainen39), and the trend seems to continue in infancy and thereafter(Reference Erkkola, Kronberg-Kippilä and Kyttälä40); the youngest and less well-educated groups exhibit a greater risk of not adhering to dietary recommendations. This is not only a Finnish phenomenon; similar findings have been reported in several studies among pregnant women and infants in other Western countries(Reference Walburg, Goehlich and Conquet13–Reference Ludvigsson and Ludvigsson17, Reference James, Nelson and Ralph19, Reference Grjibovski, Ehrenblad and Yngve21–Reference Ummarino, Albano and De Marco24). The potential to achieve substantial health benefits through improved diet in pregnancy and infancy is unquestionable(Reference Horta, Bahl and Martines2–Reference Agostoni, Braegger and Decsi6). It is a challenge in Finland, as well as in most Western countries, to develop strategies to help the families having young and less-educated parents to seek the full benefit of the maternal and child health-care system. There are interrelationships between some of the sociodemographic characteristics, since the education of young people is in many cases still continuing and the number of children (i.e. family size) will increase. In agreement with other studies, Caesarean section increased the odds for short duration, and an increasing number of siblings for longer duration of total breast-feeding(Reference Lande, Andersen and Baerug14, Reference Lanting, van Wouwe and Reijneveld16, Reference Waldenström and Aarts25).
The main virtues of our study are well-defined feeding variables and a long period of follow-up, beginning on the first days on the maternity ward and, thus, providing the most accurate picture of breast-feeding history. However, some potential limitations exist. The distribution of subjects by infant (birth weight and height, sex) and maternal (mean age, number of previous pregnancies, proportion of Caesarean sections) characteristics was comparable to similar statistics on Finnish parturients, births and newborn infants in 1996–2004(41) (data available on request). However, the participating mothers tended to smoke less than all parturients in Finland during the last 10 years (10 % v. 15 %). Being a non-smoker is a characteristic that favours breast-feeding(Reference Amir and Donath42) and is associated with an overall healthier lifestyle(Reference Steptoe, Wardle and Cui43). Although the present cohort carries HLA-conferred susceptibility to type 1 diabetes, the infants are expected to be representative of the general population of Finnish infants(Reference Ilonen, Reijonen and Herva44).
In conclusion, the type of milk feeding during infancy is strongly influenced by supplementary feeding on the maternity ward and several sociodemographic factors. Compliance with the current recommendations is relatively poor for the length of exclusive and total breast-feeding and timing of the introduction of regular milk products. A majority of infants were given supplementary milk during their stay in maternity hospital. Milk types given on the maternity ward could be reliably recalled by a questionnaire completed at 3 months after delivery. These findings highlight the adverse consequences of a relatively ‘harmless’ practice of giving donated breast milk during the first days of life.
Acknowledgements
Sources of funding: This work was supported by the Academy of Finland (grants 63672, 79685,79686, 80846, 201988, 210632), the Finnish Diabetes Research Foundation, the Finnish Pediatric Research Foundation, the Juho Vainio Foundation, the Yrjö Jahnsson Foundation, the European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes, Medical Research Funds, Turku, Oulu and Tampere University Hospitals, JDRF (grants 197032, 4-1998-274, 4-1999-731, 4-2001-435), Novo Nordisk Foundation and EU Biomed 2 Program (BMH4-CT98-3314). The researchers are independent from funders. Conflict of interest: There are no conflicts of interest. Authors’ contributions: S.M.V. has designed the DIPP Nutrition Study and is responsible for the present study. S.M.V., P.P. and M.E. designed the present study. M.E. drafted the manuscript, and did the statistical analysis together with M.S. M.K. is the Principal Investigator of the DIPP study in Oulu and Tampere, and R.V. is the Senior Investigator of the DIPP study in Oulu. C.K.-K. is responsible for the management, and S.A., T.A. and L.U. for analysis of food consumption data. All the co-authors participated in the evaluation of the results and in editing the final manuscript. Acknowledgements: We express our gratitude to the children and parents who participated. We want to thank the DIPP research nurses, doctors, nutritionists and laboratory staff for excellent collaboration over the years, and Sirpa Pohjola and Ilona Kalliomäki for their skilful technical assistance.