Exclusive breast-feeding up to about 6 months of life and continued breast-feeding thereafter up to 2 years of age and beyond is recommended by the WHO, UNICEF, professional associations, and national and supranational institutions( 1 – 4 ). Research consistently confirms the association between exclusive breast-feeding and better health, with a dose–response gradient: lower rates of breast and ovarian cancer are reported in breast-feeding mothers, as well as reduced risk of autoimmune, chronic and acute infectious diseases in breast-fed children( Reference Victora, Bahl and Barros 5 – Reference Renfrew, Dyson and McCormick 8 ). Cost savings for the health system in high-income countries are also reported, due to reduced hospital admission rates, use of drugs and working days lost for caring of sick children( Reference Renfrew, Dyson and McCormick 8 – Reference Cattaneo, Ronfani and Burmaz 14 ). Finally, better cognitive performances in breast-fed children, and women’s empowerment, are thought to possibly contribute to a richer and better social environment( Reference Horta, Loret De Mola and Victora 15 , Reference Labbok, Smith and Taylor 16 ).
Given all of the above, one would expect an efficient breast-feeding monitoring system to be in place in every country to provide policy makers, health professionals and the public at large with reliable and periodically updated breast-feeding rates.
This is not the case, especially in high-income countries( Reference Victora, Bahl and Barros 5 , Reference Bagci Bosi, Eriksen and Sobko 17 ). Annual reports on breast-feeding rates are available only for the USA, Sweden and, starting from 2015, the UK( Reference Scanlon, Li and Chen 18 – 20 ). Other countries provide data on a wider time interval: Italy every 5 years( 21 ) and Norway every 8 years( Reference Øverby, Kristiansen og and Andersen 22 ); Australia( 23 ) and Canada( Reference Gionet 24 ) collect data on a more erratic basis. Moreover, monitoring systems are rarely integrated into routine health-care systems and often require huge efforts and resources: telephone( Reference Scanlon, Li and Chen 18 , 23 ) and postal surveys( Reference Øverby, Kristiansen og and Andersen 22 , 25 ) are cumbersome and rarely provide a good coverage of the target population, often missing immigrant families. Sometimes, data are collected several months after the end of the breast-feeding period, thus hindering their validity (recall bias)( 21 , Reference Gionet 24 ). To our knowledge there are only two Western countries that regularly monitor breast-feeding rates using a system integrated into routine health care: Sweden and the UK. In Sweden, data are routinely collected during infant visits to the health centre scheduled at 1 week, 2, 4, 6, 9 and 12 months of age, attended by virtually all infants. Aggregate data are thereafter sent to a central system for analysis and annual reporting( 19 ) (Ellen Lundqvist, personal communication, March 2017). In the UK, the long tradition of quinquennial national infant feeding surveys (postal and online) was discontinued in 2010, having acknowledged that it was no longer sustainable( 26 ). From 2015, breast-feeding data are collected from local health authorities during the child health visits scheduled at 6–8 weeks( 20 ).
In Italy, breast-feeding data are monitored every 5 years, along with other health information, using questionnaires administered during a face-to-face interview( 21 ). From 1999 in Emilia-Romagna, a region with 4420000 inhabitants situated in the north-east of Italy, regional data on infant feeding were collected every 3 years, using a paper or an electronic questionnaire (the latter only in 2011) administered at primary-care centres during infant immunization at a given time of the year (the survey usually lasted 6 weeks). In Emilia-Romagna, paediatric vaccines are provided free of charge to all infants at primary-care centres. Appointments are based on national vaccine schedules, the first traditionally being at 3 months of age and the second at 5 months of age (until new arrangements will be made with the introduction of new vaccines).
The objective of the present paper is to describe a new breast-feeding monitoring system implemented in Emilia-Romagna starting from 2015, completely integrated into the routine health-care system, that allows collection of breast-feeding data on an annual basis and that can be linked with other current health databases to provide more information. This system, quite unique with respect to other breast-feeding monitoring systems, can be used as a model if shown to be sustainable.
Methods
In Emilia-Romagna, up until 2014, paediatric immunization data were provided from primary-care centres to the regional health information and statistics centre as aggregate data. From 2015, a new health database with single records for each individual, containing data on paediatric immunization, was developed and implemented. Health workers at primary-care centres collect and enter data in an electronic form during the immunization visit: along with a set of variables related to demographic data of the child and specific to the vaccines applied, a set of four yes/no questions has been added to assess breast-feeding at the first and second appointment (Box 1). Based on the WHO recommendations( 27 ), the four questions have a recall period of 24 h and can be used to define mutually exclusive breast-feeding categories: exclusive breast-feeding, predominant breast-feeding (exclusive and predominant breast-feeding together constitute full breast-feeding), complementary feeding and non-breast-feeding (Box 2).
In the last 24 h, your baby has received:
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∙ Breast milk?
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∙ Water (including sweetened water), teas, infusions, fruit juice or other non-nutritive liquids, including oral rehydration salts (ORS) solution?
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∙ Formula milk, cow’s milk or others not human milk?
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∙ Solid or semi-solid or liquid food other than human milk?
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∙ Exclusive breast-feeding: the infant has received only breast milk from his/her mother or a wet nurse, or expressed breast milk, and no other liquids or solids with the exception of drops or syrups consisting of vitamins, mineral supplements or medicines.
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∙ Predominant breast-feeding: the infant’s predominant source of nourishment has been breast milk. However, the infant may also have received water and water-based drinks (sweetened and flavoured water, teas, infusions, etc.); fruit juice; oral rehydration salts (ORS) solution; drop and syrup forms of vitamins, mineral and medicines; and ritual fluids (in limited quantities). Except for fruit juice and sugar water, no food-based fluid is allowed under this definition.
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∙ Exclusive breast-feeding and predominant breast-feeding together constitute full breast-feeding.
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∙ Complementary feeding: the child has received both breast milk and solid (or semi-solid) food.
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∙ Non-breast-feeding: the child has not received breast milk, including expressed breast milk or from a wet nurse.
From 16 March to 30 June 2015, guardians of infants aged 61–90d (first immunization visit) and 121–150d (second immunization visit) were interviewed about infant feeding. Both Italian and non-Italian speakers were included if understanding was assured, using a linguistic mediator as needed.
Data were sent from the primary-care centres to the regional health information and statistics centre that checked for duplicate records or implausible data. Infants could be included twice (at 3 and 5 months of age) if they had both their first and second immunization visits during the survey interval; in the case of multiple visits, only data gathered during the first appointment for each immunization session were included in the analysis (i.e. once at 3 months and once at 5 months of age). Breast-feeding rates based on the four WHO categories were calculated separately for infants aged 61–90 d (3 months of age) and for infants aged 121–150d (5 months of age).
The probability to be breast-fed decreases with age and the age of infants presenting to vaccination can range from 61 to 90 d and from 121 to 150d for the 3rd-month and the 5th-month vaccination, respectively. Therefore, it could be misleading to compare the chance of being breast-fed by place (i.e. districts or local health authorities) or by year, without taking in account the differences in age at the vaccination time. Thus, for each age group (3 and 5 months), direct age standardization was applied to breast-feeding rates, taking as a reference population the whole group of infants immunized during the 2015 survey, based on 10d subgroups (61–70d, 71–80d and 81–90d for infants 3 months of age; and 121–130d, 131–140d and 141–150d for infants 5 months of age), thereby allowing comparison between groups of infants with comparable age distribution (within a range of 10d). Mean regional breast-feeding rates at 3 and 5 months of age were calculated; mean breast-feeding rates at local health authority level (corresponding roughly to an administrative province of about 100000 to 350000 inhabitants) were also assessed.
Record linkage using a unique identification number of the infant was attempted with the medical birth database (Fig. 1) to identify factors associated with the outcome of interest (full breast-feeding at 3 and 5 months). Statistical analyses were carried out using the Stata statistical software package version 13.1. In the current paper, we present mean rates of breast-feeding at 3 and 5 months of age at regional and at local health authority level and results of the record linkage process.
Results
In 2015, during the survey period, 15263 infants received one or more vaccines in Emilia-Romagna region (8459 at 3 months and 6804 at 5 months of age), 51 % of the infants were male and 32 % were born to non-Italian mothers, mostly from Morocco (6 %), Romania (4 %) and Albania (4 %). As foreseen, age distribution of infants, based on 10d classes, varied between local health authorities at both the first (Fig. 2) and the second vaccination (Fig. 3).
Data on breast-feeding were available for 14 044 infants (7861 at 3 months and 6183 at 5 months of age). The mean regional full breast-feeding rate was 52 % (45 % exclusive and 7 % predominant) at 3 months; it dropped to 33 % (27 % exclusive and 6 % predominant) at 5 months. Differences between local health authorities were large both at 3 months (range: 42–62 %; Fig. 4) and at 5 months of age (range: 26–46 %; Fig. 5).
Record linkage between the immunization database and the medical birth database was successful for 14192 records out of 15263 (93 %), most linkage failures being due to infants born outside the Emilia-Romagna region (872 out of 1071 linkage failures) for which the corresponding birth certificates were not available. Considering only records from the immunization database reporting breast-feeding data, and for which record linkage with the medical birth database was successful, a total of 13177 observations were available. For those records, data retrieved from the medical birth database were complete for most of the analysed variables; in particular, completeness was 100 % for nationality of the mother, maternal education, labour and delivery mode, gestational age at birth and single fetus, but it went down to 96 % for paternal education, to 92 % for maternal overweight/obesity, and to 84 % for epidural anaesthesia (Table 1).
Total observations more than doubled with respect to the previous survey: in 2011 breast-feeding information was collected for 6065 infants, whereas in 2015 a total sample of 14044 was observed.
In 2016 the survey was repeated; health professionals agreed to collect data for a longer period, from 16 March to 30 November: data on breast-feeding were collected for 33244 infants (analysis of data in progress).
Discussion
In Emilia-Romagna, breast-feeding rates at 3 and 5 months of age fall short of the recommended level. Interventions are needed to better support mothers and families and to attain successful breast-feeding, lasting longer, in a much larger number of women. To monitor the impact of such interventions, annually updated local data are necessary.
The new monitoring system to assess breast-feeding rates implemented in 2015 in Emilia-Romagna region has proved to be feasible, sustainable and more efficient than the previous one: observations more than doubled, standardization provided more comparable data between different local health authorities, record linkage with another regional health database has provided insights on local protective and risk factors for successful breast-feeding without need for additional resources, the survey has been repeated in 2016 for a longer period and a new round of data collection is already planned for 2017. Switching from a self-standing questionnaire to a totally integrated system that flows along the immunization database has reduced the workload of the health professionals working in the primary-care centres who are responsible for the breast-feeding survey. No additional personnel were requested, as the survey required only a little extra work (four yes/no answers to be entered online). Health professionals involved in the monitoring system spontaneously proposed to double the survey period for the year 2016 (collecting phase already concluded) and for the years to come. Having more observations provides more precise estimates of breast-feeding rates not only at regional level, but also at local health authority level. This is important, as planning and financing local projects to protect, promote and support breast-feeding depends on local health authorities.
Moreover, using age-standardized data for assessing and comparing breast-feeding rates gets rid of possible distortions due to the ample range of ages at which infants receive their first and second immunization: in our region, almost a quarter (23 %) of infants get their first vaccination between 61 and 70d and another quarter (24 %) between 81 and 90d, with large differences between local health authorities (Fig. 2); a similar dispersion in terms of age is observed also for infants getting the second immunization (Fig. 3). Direct age standardization permits comparisons between different local health authorities (Figs 4 and 5) and, using the same standard population along the years, will allow meaningful comparison during time and assessment of trends. To our knowledge, this is the first time that age-standardized breast-feeding rates have been used.
Finally, the presence of a unique anonymous identification number consistent across different regional health databases allows gathering additional information through record linkage. The Emilia-Romagna regional health system has a rich set of administrative health databases, describing relevant conditions like births, hospital admissions, drug prescriptions, laboratory examinations and deaths( 28 ). Information from regional databases is collected as disaggregated data (one record for each patient). To guarantee privacy, a unique anonymous personal identification number is associated with every single user of the health system. The personal identification number is consistent for each individual across different databases and along time: therefore, through record linkage of different databases it is possible to describe each contact between a citizen and the regional health system during his/her entire life. In 2015 the record linkage of the infant feeding database was made with the medical birth database and it has been successful for most observed cases (93 % of the total). In the future, it will be possible to plan linkages with other regional databases: for example, record linkage with the children’s hospital discharge database or with the drug prescriptions database could provide insights about the additional costs in terms of health-care consumption of not being breast-fed. Providing only aggregated data does not allow this sort of analyses: in Sweden, for example, data are sent in an aggregated form for all of the twenty-one counties (Ellen Lundqvist, personal communication, March 2017), with the exception of Uppsala and Orebro counties for which single patient data are available( Reference Magnusson, Lagerberg and Wallby 29 ).
A limitation of our study is that feeding information was incomplete (data available for 14044 out of 15263 immunized infants, 92 % of the total). As this was the first year of implementation of a new monitoring system, we expect more complete data in the future. Moreover, completeness was not satisfactory for all variables of the medical birth database (Table 1): information on paternal education, maternal overweight/obesity and epidural anaesthesia was missing in 4, 8 and 16 % of records, respectively (information on epidural anaesthesia was included in the medical birth database for the first time in 2015; completeness is expected to improve in the future).
Finally, even though the use of immunization sessions is a good opportunity to collect data on infant feeding, as paediatric immunizations are exclusively provided at immunization centres in Emilia-Romagna, it excludes infants whose parents do not comply with vaccination schedules. Notwithstanding, we think that this system is the one that can provide the more complete picture of breast-feeding in our region, and in other regions and countries as well. In Emilia-Romagna, infant immunizations are totally missing in about 3 % of the infants( Reference Paolucci, Gualanduzzi and Finarelli 30 ); thus regional estimates of breast-feeding rates should not be grossly erroneous due to those missing data. It is a common belief that families that are totally against immunization are generally favourable to breast-feeding, but at present we do not have data proving it. It could be of interest, in the future, to conduct a focused analysis, using a different data collection instrument, to study infant feeding attitudes and practices in families that oppose vaccination.
In our opinion, the system described herein, and used in Emilia-Romagna region starting from 2015, can be a model for other Italian regions and other high-income countries that already have in place a set of national health databases, including an immunization database, and for which immunization is universally delivered within a unique health setting. The Emilia-Romagna system has been shown to be feasible and sustainable at no, or very little, additional cost. Comments gathered from our health professionals, working in the immunization centres and collecting and inputting feeding data, reassured us that the new monitoring system is much easier to comply with, as it requires less time, avoids double input of data and has been proposed for use during the entire calendar year.
Acknowledgements
Acknowledgements: The authors wish to thank Bruna Borgini, Michela Bragliani and Elena Castelli for administrative support at regional level; APEC (Association of Community Pediatricians) for conceiving and sustaining the monitoring system since 1999; and Adriano Cattaneo for providing suggestions in the phase of analysis and for revising the draft of the paper. They also thank all coordinators for the 2015 survey at local level: Angela Castellana, Carla Ghigini, Roberto Maffi, Anna Maria Milani, Raffaella Pellizzari and Marilena Prazzoli (Piacenza Azienda Unità Sanitaria Locale (AUSL)); Giovanna Bussolati and Icilio Dodi (Parma AUSL); Marina Sparano, Luigi Moscara and Alessandro Volta (Reggio Emilia AUSL); Giulio Sighinolfi and Maria Vezzani (Modena AUSL); Paola Lenzi and Rita Ricci (Bologna AUSL); Paola Caroli and Elisabetta Valenti (Imola AUSL); Flavia Pascoletti and Massimo Cornale (Ferrara AUSL); Luisa Baldi, Giovanna Cappelli, Oriana Gasperoni, Claudia Muratori and Ivonne Zoffoli (ex Ravenna AUSL); Anna Maria Baldoni (ex Forlì AUSL); Antonella Brunelli, Massimo Farneti, Marcella Lombardi and Fosca Marrone (ex Cesena AUSL); Maurizio Bigi and Antonella Mazzocchi (ex Rimini AUSL). Finally, the authors are sincerely grateful to all parents and caregivers who participated to the survey for providing infant feeding information. Financial support: This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial or not-for-profit sectors. Conflict of interest: None. Authorship: S.D.M. and V.B. conceived and planned the paper; S.D.M., S. Borsari, E.V. and C.C. developed the monitoring system; S.D.M. and C.C. coordinated the data collection; S.S., L.C. and S. Battaglia managed the data fluxes and performed the record linkage; S.S. and S.D.M. analysed the data; S.D.M. wrote the first report; all co-authors revised, commented and approved the paper. Ethics of human subject participation: Not applicable.