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. 2012 Dec;7(6):526–534. doi: 10.1089/bfm.2011.0124

Table 4.

Themes and Supporting Quotes About the Understanding of Breastfeeding Among Pregnant Women at the Third Trimester and Postpartum Mothers

 
Selected quotes
Themes Pregnant women (focused group discussion) Postpartum mothers (in-depth interview)
Awareness of some components of breastfeeding guidelines
 1. Know the general health benefit of breastfeeding “[Breastfeeding is] good for baby's, especially the foremilk very good for baby's immune system. In addition, breastfeeding could improve the mother–baby relationship” (28 years old, 34th gestational week, teacher) “Breastfeeding is the best. It is safe. You know the ‘melamine infant formula contamination incidentsa in 2008,’ I worry about the quality of formula” (28 years old, 6 months postpartum, mixed breastfeeding, company employee)
 2. Know the recommended duration for exclusive breastfeeding “In the prenatal education, I knew exclusive breastfeeding should last for 6 months” (30 years old, 37th gestational week, dentist)  
Misunderstanding of breastfeeding
 3. Don't actually know the difference between breastmilk and formula; regard mixed feeding as the ideal way to ensure nutrition and convenience of weaning “If baby is fed by a mixed way, the nutrition would be better. I know foremilk would help baby's immune system, but how about other nutrients? Formula has many nutritional elements…Furthermore, it would be easy for weaning…” (34 years old, 35th week gestational, teacher /dancer) “Although I know breastfeeding is good, but what's the difference between breastmilk and infant formula? Formula includes many nutrients. Does breastmilk have enough [nutrients] too? I don't know” (34 years old, 2 months postpartum, mixed feeding, company employee)
 4. Unawareness of the recommended duration for breastfeeding and traditional idea about discontinuing breastfeeding “Usually breastfeeding would last for 9–10 months, at most 1 year” (31 years, 36th week, teacher) “I know from my doctor that breastfeeding should last for 10–12 months” (30 years old, 7 months postpartum, mixed breastfeeding, physician)
  “After menstruation resumed, breastmilk would have no any nutrition value, just like water” (34 years old, 35th gestational week, teacher/dancer) “Many people told me that after the menstruation resumed, breastmilk would have no any nutritional value” (31 years old, 4 months postpartum, exclusively breastfeeding, company employee)
Feedback on breastfeeding service through perinatal care
 5. Don't have time to join in the prenatal education “[I did not join in the prenatal education] since I have to work” (28 years old, 34th gestational week, company employee) “There were prenatal classes in hospitals, but I just didn't have time to attend…I needed to work” (28 years old, 2 months postpartum, exclusively breastfeeding, physician)
 6. Don't have enough communication with MCH care providers During prenatal care: “It was very fast for each antenatal check-up, less than 10 minutes. But I had to wait for [the doctor] more than 3 hours” (27 years old, 36th gestational week, company employee) During childbirth in hospitals: “No specific guidance on breastfeeding when I lived in hospital after childbirth. They (health staff) just told us not to bring bottle milk to the hospital. Every day, nurses asked me whether I had breastmilk. If I had not, she then gave us a cup with a fixed quantity of formula to feed the baby every 4 hours. They didn't require me to breastfeed my baby and didn't teach me how to breastfeed the baby” (35 years old, 2 months postpartum, formula feeding, company employee)
  “There are always a lot of patients. Doctors must be bored since every woman has a lot of questions” (28 years old, 34th gestational week, company employee) During child health care: “At the kid health check-up, doctors just asked me whether my baby was having breastmilk or formula. They didn't say any others” (30 years old, 8 months postpartum, mixed feeding, unemployed)
 7. Get the knowledge and information of breastfeeding mainly from Internet, books, friends, and families “Some prenatal education will have charge. Internet is very convenient to get all information. No need to take the class” (29 years old, 35th gestational week, company employee) “Usually I know [breastfeeding] from the Internet and one book. I was encouraged and decided to breastfeed by one book” (27 years old, 1 months postpartum, mixed feeding, company employee)
 8. Need support to deal with the difficult during breastfeeding   “No any health staff member told me how to deal with the insufficient breastmilk production. How can I produce enough breastmilk?” (34 years old, 2 months postpartum, mixed feeding, company manager)
    “The baby had a disease 1 month ago and he stopped breastfeeding himself” (29 years old, 8 months postpartum, having ceased breastfeeding, accountant)
a

Infant formula contamination incidents. A food safety incident in China revealed in September 2008 that powdered formula, fresh milk, and other products in China were found to be adulterated with melamine, a synthetic nitrogenous product, to confound a test for determining crude protein content.

MCH, maternal and child health.