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Title: | DOES BREASTFEEDING OR NOT AFFECT A BETTER MATERNAL QUALITY OF LIFE? : LITERATURE REVIEW |
Authors: | Rahma Oktaviya, Aulia Hardianto, Gatut Utomo, Budi Diah Wittiarika, Ivon |
Keywords: | Breastfeeding Duration of Breastfeeding Maternal Quality of Life Literature Review |
Issue Date: | Oct-2020 |
Abstract: | The Southeast Asian Journal of Midwifery Vol. 6, No.2, Oktober 2020, p: 68-75 E-ISSN: 2476-972X P-ISSN: 2476-9738 Journal-aipkind.or.id 68 DOES BREASTFEEDING OR NOT AFFECT A BETTER MATERNAL QUALITY OF LIFE? : LITERATURE REVIEW Aulia Rahma Oktaviya1*, Gatut Hardianto2, Budi Utomo3, Ivon Diah Wittiarika4 1Bachelor program of Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, 60131, Indonesia 2 Consultant in Departement of Obstetric and Gynecologic Universitas Airlangga, Soetomo Hospital, Surabaya, Indonesia 3 Lecturer in Departement of Public Health & Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia 4 Lecturer in Midwifery Program, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Airlangga, Surabaya, Indonesia INFORMASI ARTIKEL: A B S T R A C T Riwayat Artikel: Tanggal diterima: September 2020 Tanggal di revisi: September 2020 Tanggal di Publikasi: Oktober 2020 Key Word : Breastfeeding, Duration of Breastfeeding, Maternal Quality of Life, Literature Review Quality of life is important to achieve the best performance of mothers. Maternal quality of life is usually measured by WHOQOL-BREF standards (quality of life of the World Health Organization-BREF), SF-36 (Short-36), or MGI (Mother Generated Index). One factor that affects the maternal quality of life is breastfeeding. The practice of breastfeeding is the mother who is breastfeeding (giving only breast milk) and the mother who is not breastfeeding (with formula milk) as well as seeing the length of breastfeeding time for less than 6 months or more than 6 months. This literature review has research question with PICO standard to get the aim about the correlation between the practice of breastfeeding and maternal quality of life. 466 literatures were obtained from the SCOPUS, Proquest, Google Scholar, PubMed and EBSCOhost databases. Literature screening is done by looking at the inclusion and exclusion criteria that have been set so that 10 literatures will be reviewed. Most of the literature reports that mothers who breastfeed and continue to breastfeed even though only a month has a better quality of life than mothers who did not breastfeed. One study said that breastfeeding causes a decrease in the maternal quality of life, as well as several other studies that found no significant correlation between breastfeeding practices and maternal quality of life. This result can be used as a reference for the health policy to promote breastfeeding and quality of life. |
URI: | http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1823 |
Appears in Collections: | 2. SEAJOM: The Southeast Asia Journal of Midwifery |
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