2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.rppede.2016.03.003
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Excessive weight loss in exclusively breastfed full-term newborns in a Baby-Friendly Hospital

Abstract: Objective:To determine the risk factors for weight loss over 8% in full-term newborns at postpartum discharge from a Baby Friendly Hospital.Methods:The cases were selected from a cohort of infants belonging to a previous study. Healthy full-term newborns with birth weight ≥2.000g, who were exclusively breastfed were included and excluded twins and those undergoing phototherapy as well as those discharged after 96h of life. The analyzed maternal and neonatal variables were maternal age, parity, ethnicity, type … Show more

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Cited by 12 publications
(26 citation statements)
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References 23 publications
(15 reference statements)
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“…However, infants born vaginally are often discharged earlier than those born by CS due to maternal recovery time from surgery, introducing possible confounding as vaginally delivered babies may continue to lose weight after discharge. Mezzacappa and Ferreira () accounted for this in their analysis; however, Verd et al () did not. Miller et al () and Flaherman et al () weighed babies every 24 hr until discharge, with an extra timepoint for CS infants due to longer hospital stay (96 hr) but compared weight loss at set timepoints (24 and 72 hr).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
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“…However, infants born vaginally are often discharged earlier than those born by CS due to maternal recovery time from surgery, introducing possible confounding as vaginally delivered babies may continue to lose weight after discharge. Mezzacappa and Ferreira () accounted for this in their analysis; however, Verd et al () did not. Miller et al () and Flaherman et al () weighed babies every 24 hr until discharge, with an extra timepoint for CS infants due to longer hospital stay (96 hr) but compared weight loss at set timepoints (24 and 72 hr).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 86%
“…Of the seven papers included, two were retrospective cohort studies (Flaherman et al, ; Miller et al, ), three were prospective cohort studies (Manganaro, Mamì, Marrone, Marseglia, & Gemelli, ; Saki, Eshraghian, Mohammad, Foroushani, & Bordbar, ; Samayam, Ranganathan, & Balasundaram, ), and two were secondary analyses of prospective cohorts (Mezzacappa & Ferreira, ; Verd, de Sotto, Fernandez, & Gutierrez, ). Two studies were carried out with the same United States of America (USA) cohort, and single studies were based in Italy, Spain, Iran, India, and Brazil.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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