As teachers and frequent consumers of medical literature, we subscribe to a simple approach to manuscript reviews—Is the topic important? Is the study well designed with appropriate methods and data analysis? What is the take-home message? In this issue of JFP, we are delighted to see 5 articles exploring issues of breastfeeding and/or neonatal jaundice.1-5 The topics are related and clearly important. The well-recognized benefits of breastfeeding stand in sharp contrast to the low initiation rates, especially among women of minority race; rates are even lower for continuation of breastfeeding beyond 3 months. A better understanding of the barriers and facilitators of breastfeeding can help us as family physicians counsel our patients.
Inquiry into the issue of promoting breastfeeding begins by exploring risk factors for early weaning, as reported in 4 of the studies. These factors, including unintended pregnancy, breast pain and mastitis, pacifier use, and neonatal jaundice, clearly cannot be viewed in isolation. It is not until we ask the “why” questions, through qualitative or mixed methods research, that we begin to understand the complexity of the process through which these factors operate. Only through gaining this understanding will we achieve our goal as physicians of providing information and guidance that may lead to improved health.
In addition to their topical importance, 4 of these studies represent a continuation of a tradition of involvement of family physicians in research focusing on perinatal care. Beginning in the 1970s, family physicians began to establish our own literature base by asking questions that were important to our patients and to the way that we approach the care of pregnant women and their newborns. We have much to be proud of in the accomplishments of a small cadre of family medicine investigators in perinatal medicine. Prior studies have established the safety and importance of family physicians as providers of pregnancy care.6,7 The style of pregnancy and intrapartum care offered by family physicians, characterized by fewer interventions, has resulted in good obstetric outcomes and high satisfaction for many women. Landmark clinical trials by family physicians, investigating the appropriate use of technology in maternity care, have confirmed the lack of benefit of such routine procedures as episiotomy8 and obstetric ultrasound.9 Other investigators brought to light common postpartum concerns that had been largely ignored in the literature.10 The 5 reports in this issue of JFP add to that literature base.
These papers also demonstrate advances in research design and analytic methodology for observational studies, a departure from early family practice studies that relied on surveys and case series with simple descriptive statistics. Madlon-Kay,1 for example, assessed the diagnostic test characteristics, including likelihood ratios, for a simple and inexpensive tool to evaluate neonatal jaundice. She determined the tool’s suitability for home use by parents. Taylor and Cabral2 developed a logistic regression model, using the National Survey of Family Growth, to investigate the relationship between unintended pregnancy and breastfeeding. The stratified analysis on demographic variables allowed them to document racial differences for breastfeeding initiation and continuation in mistimed versus unwanted pregnancies. Schwartz and colleagues3 documented associations between demographic and clinical variables and breastfeeding in a prospective cohort of women using life table analyses. Similarly, Levy and coworkers4 made use of life table analysis to explore non-nutritive sucking and breastfeeding in relationship to childcare attendance. Unfortunately, without understanding the intent of women regarding weaning, we are left with more questions than answers. Willis and colleagues5 used a qualitative approach to understand women’s concerns about breastfeeding a jaundiced newborn. The interactions between new mothers and medical professionals emerged as the most important influence on feeding decisions. We are still left with uncertainty about how best to support mothers in this situation.
So what have we learned from these studies? Of the many factors that interfere with breastfeeding, some are potentially amenable to interventions. We have also learned that mothers can be trained to take a more active role in monitoring their newborns and, in doing so, feel more reassured about their infants’ health. We now need to test approaches to prevention of unwanted pregnancies, optimal strategies for detecting and managing neonatal jaundice while maintaining breastfeeding, deferring the initiation of pacifiers, and supporting women with difficulties in the early days and weeks of breastfeeding.
In a time where we find ourselves exploring and perhaps redefining our role as family physicians, it is important to remember that we are unique as the only discipline that provides continuity care for both new mothers and their children. We therefore have special opportunities to identify and understand critical issues for new parents, and to help them prepare for their roles. We now have access to a perinatal database of literature, organizational structures (such as the Cochrane collaboration), and shared experience to enable the practice of evidence-based medicine as we strive toward optimizing pregnancy outcomes. A next step is to establish the research base to enable evidence-based patient choices toward health behaviors that create healthy families.11 Family medicine investigators have the opportunity to make significant contributions in this area.