The experiences of new mothers accessing feeding support for infants with Down syndrome during the COVID-19 pandemic

Hielscher, Laura, Ludlow, Amanda, Mengoni, Silvana, Rogers, Samantha and Irvine, Karen (2022) The experiences of new mothers accessing feeding support for infants with Down syndrome during the COVID-19 pandemic. International Journal of Developmental Disabilities. ISSN 2047-3869
Copy

Infants with Down syndrome are more likely to experience feeding problems and mothers are likely to require more feeding support than mothers of typically developing infants. During the COVID-19 pandemic, many feeding support services changed from face-to-face to online, which impacted some maternal feeding experiences negatively, but no studies to date have explored the impact for mothers of infants with Down syndrome. Thematic analysis was conducted on semi-structured interviews from thirteen new mothers of infants (aged 8-17 months) with Down syndrome in the UK. Three superordinate themes were generated: 1) Every baby with Down syndrome has a unique journey, 2) There’s no point asking, they won’t know, 3) Lack of in-person support. Many mothers expressed frustrations over health professionals’ lack of Down syndrome specific knowledge resulting in unmet needs, further magnified due to the nature of the virtual support being offered. Moreover, mothers struggled with reduced social support from other mothers when encountering feeding problems. These results hold real-world implications for health professionals who could provide more specialised face-to-face feeding support to mothers of infants with Down syndrome. This should be prioritised for children’s overall development and mothers’ wellbeing.


picture_as_pdf
The_experiences_of_new_mothers_accessing_feeding_support_for_infants_with_down_syndrome_during_the_COVID_19_pandemic.pdf
subject
Published Version
Available under Creative Commons: BY 4.0

View Download
visibility_off picture_as_pdf

Submitted Version
lock copyright

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation METS MODS RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads