Litcius/Paper detail

The Relationship Between Internalized Weight Stigma During Pregnancy and Breastfeeding: A Prospective Longitudinal Study

Rachel Dieterich, Judy C. Chang, Cynthia A. Danford, Paul Scott, Caroline Wend, Jill R. Demirci

2021Obesity14 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to examine the relationship between internalized weight stigma during pregnancy and breastfeeding outcomes at 1 month post partum among individuals with prepregnancy overweight or obesity. Secondarily, the study explored the temporal stability of internalized weight stigma from the third trimester to 1 month post partum via the Weight Bias Internalization Scale (WBIS). METHODS: A total of 103 pregnant individuals with overweight or obesity were recruited for this study. Participants completed the WBIS during the third trimester and self-reported breastfeeding initiation, continuation, and exclusivity outcomes at 1 month post partum. A paired t test and binomial logistic regression were conducted with covariates hierarchically added to the model. RESULTS: = -0.83, P = 0.41), evidencing temporal stability in WBIS scores from pre to post partum. Prenatal WBIS scores did not predict breastfeeding initiation, continuation, or exclusivity at 1 month post partum in either unadjusted or adjusted models. CONCLUSIONS: Collectively, this sample displayed low weight bias internalization, which was not predictive of breastfeeding initiation, continuation, or exclusivity at 1 month post partum. Future research is needed to develop a pregnancy-specific weight stigma measure.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBreastfeedingOverweightPregnancyWeight stigmaProspective cohort studyLongitudinal studyLogistic regressionObstetricsDemographyObesityPediatricsInternal medicineBiologyPathologySociologyGeneticsObesity and Health PracticesEating Disorders and BehaviorsBariatric Surgery and Outcomes