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安抚奶嘴的使用与母乳喂养、婴儿猝死综合征、感染和牙齿咬合不正的关系。

Association between pacifier use and breast-feeding, sudden infant death syndrome, infection and dental malocclusion.

机构信息

Telethon Institute for Child Health Research, School of Nursing and Midwifery, Curtin University of Technology, and Health Department of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia.

出版信息

Int J Evid Based Healthc. 2005 Jul;3(6):147-67. doi: 10.1111/j.1479-6988.2005.00024.x.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To critically review all literature related to pacifier use for full-term healthy infants and young children. The specific review questions addressed are: What is the evidence of adverse and/or positive outcomes of pacifier use in infancy and childhood in relation to each of the following subtopics: • breast-feeding; • sudden infant death syndrome; • infection; • dental malocclusion.

INCLUSION CRITERIA

Specific criteria were used to determine which studies would be included in the review: (i) the types of participants; (ii) the types of research design; and (iii) the types of outcome measures. To be included a study has to meet all criteria.

TYPES OF PARTICIPANTS

The participants included in the review were healthy term infants and healthy children up to the age of 16 years. Studies that focused on preterm infants, and infants and young children with serious illness or congenital malformations were excluded. However, some total population studies did include these children. Types of research design: It became evident early in the review process that very few randomised controlled trials had been conducted. A decision was made to include observational epidemiological designs, specifically prospective cohort studies and, in the case of sudden infant death syndrome research, case-control studies. Purely descriptive and cross-sectional studies were excluded, as were qualitative studies and all other forms of evidence. A number of criteria have been proposed to establish causation in the scientific and medical literature. These key criteria were applied in the review process and are described as follows: (i) consistency and unbiasedness of findings; (ii) strength of association; (iii) temporal sequence; (iv) dose-response relationship; (v) specificity; (vi) coherence with biological background and previous knowledge; (vii) biological plausibility; and (viii) experimental evidence. Studies that did not meet the requirement of appropriate temporal sequencing of events and studies that did not present an estimate of the strength of association were not included in the final review. Types of outcome measures: Our specific interest was pacifier use related to: • breast-feeding; • sudden infant death syndrome; • infection; • dental malocclusion. Studies that examined pacifier use related to procedural pain relief were excluded. Studies that examined the relationship between pacifier use and gastro-oesophageal reflux were also excluded as this information has been recently presented as a systematic review.

SEARCH STRATEGY

The review comprised published and unpublished research literature. The search was restricted to reports published in English, Spanish and German. The time period covered research published from January 1960 to October 2003. A protocol developed by New Zealand Health Technology Assessment was used to guide the search process. The search comprised bibliographic databases, citation searching, other evidence-based and guidelines sites, government documents, books and reports, professional websites, national associations, hand search, contacting national/international experts and general internet searching. ASSESSMENT OF QUALITY: All studies identified during the database search were assessed for relevance to the review based on the information provided in the title, abstract and descriptor/MeSH terms, and a full report was retrieved for all studies that met the inclusion criteria. Studies identified from reference list searches were assessed for relevance based on the study title. Keywords included: dummy, dummies, pacifier(s), soother(s), comforter(s), non-nutritive sucking, infant, child, infant care. Initially, studies were reviewed for inclusion by pairs of principal investigators. Authorship of articles was not concealed from the reviewers. Next, the methodological quality of included articles was assessed independently by groups of three or more principal investigators and clinicians using a checklist. All 20 studies that were accepted met minimum set criteria, but few passed without some methodological concern.

DATA EXTRACTION

To meet the requirements of the Joanna Briggs Institute, reasons for acceptance and non-acceptance at each phase were clearly documented. An assessment protocol and report form was developed for each of the three phases of review. The first form was created to record investigators' evaluations of studies included in the initial review. Those studies that failed to meet strict inclusion criteria were excluded at this point. A second form was designed to facilitate an in-depth critique of epidemiological study methodology. The checklist was pilot tested and adjustments were made before reviewers were trained in its use. When reviewers could not agree on an assessment, it was passed to additional reviewers and discussed until a consensus was reached. At this stage, studies other than cohort, case-control and randomised controlled trials were excluded. Issues of clarification were also addressed at this point. The final phase was that of integration. This phase, undertaken by the principal investigators, was assisted by the production of data extraction tables. Through a process of trial and error, a framework was formulated that adequately summarised the key elements of the studies. This information was tabulated under the following headings: authors/setting, design, exposure/outcome, confounders controlled, analysis and main findings.

RESULTS

With regard to the breast-feeding outcome, 10 studies met the inclusion criteria, comprising two randomised controlled trials and eight cohort studies. The research was conducted between 1995 and 2003 in a wide variety of settings involving research participants from diverse socioeconomic and cultural backgrounds. Information regarding exposure and outcome status, and potential confounding factors was obtained from: antenatal and postnatal records; interviews before discharge from obstetric/midwifery care; post-discharge interviews; and post-discharge postal and telephone surveys. Both the level of contact and the frequency of contact with the informant, the child's mother, differed widely. Pacifier use was defined and measured inconsistently, possibly because few studies were initiated expressly to investigate its relationship with breast-feeding. Completeness of follow-up was addressed, but missing data were not uniformly identified and explained. When comparisons were made between participants and non-participants there was some evidence of differential loss and a bias towards families in higher socioeconomic groups. Multivariate analysis was undertaken in the majority of studies, with some including a large number of sociodemographic, obstetric and infant covariates and others including just maternal age and education. As might be expected given the inconsistency of definition and measurement, the relationship between pacifier use and breast-feeding was expressed in many different ways and a meta-analysis was not appropriate. In summary, only one study did not report a negative association between pacifier use and breast-feeding duration or exclusivity. Results indicate an increase in risk for a reduced overall duration of breast-feeding from 20% to almost threefold. The data suggest that very infrequent use may not have any overall negative impact on breast-feeding outcomes. Six sudden infant death syndrome case-control studies met the criteria for inclusion. The research was conducted with information gathered between 1984 and 1999 in Norway, UK, New Zealand, the Netherlands and USA. Exposure information was obtained from a variety of sources including: hospital and antenatal records, death scene investigation, and interview and questionnaire. Information for cases was sought within 2 days after death, within 2-4 weeks after death and in one study between 3 and 11 years after death. Information for controls was sought from as early as 4 days of a nominated sudden infant death syndrome case, to between 1 and 7 weeks from the case date, and again in one study some 3-11 years later. In the majority of the studies case ascertainment was determined by post-mortem. Pacifier use was again defined and measured somewhat inconsistently. All studies controlled for confounding factors by matching and/or using multivariate analysis. Generally, antenatal and postnatal factors, as well as infant care practices, and maternal, family and socioeconomic issues were considered. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

目的

批判性地回顾所有与足月健康婴儿和幼儿使用安抚奶嘴相关的文献。具体的审查问题包括:安抚奶嘴使用在以下各个子主题方面对婴儿和儿童的不良和/或积极结果有什么证据:

  • 母乳喂养;

  • 婴儿猝死综合征;

  • 感染;

  • 牙齿错颌。

纳入标准

为了确定哪些研究将包含在综述中,使用了特定的标准:(i)参与者的类型;(ii)研究设计的类型;(iii)结果测量的类型。要被纳入研究,必须满足所有标准。

参与者类型

综述中包括的参与者是健康的足月婴儿和 16 岁以下的健康儿童。研究对象集中在早产儿和患有严重疾病或先天性畸形的婴儿和幼儿的研究被排除在外。然而,一些总体人群研究确实包括了这些儿童。

研究设计类型

在审查过程的早期,很明显很少有随机对照试验已经进行。决定纳入观察性流行病学设计,特别是前瞻性队列研究,以及在婴儿猝死综合征研究中,病例对照研究。纯粹描述性和横断面研究被排除在外,因为这些研究没有提出因果关系的关键标准。

研究结果

关于母乳喂养的结果,有 10 项研究符合纳入标准,包括两项随机对照试验和八项队列研究。研究于 1995 年至 2003 年期间在各种不同的环境中进行,涉及来自不同社会经济和文化背景的研究参与者。关于暴露和结果状况以及潜在混杂因素的信息是从以下方面获得的:产前和产后记录;在产科/助产护理出院前的访谈;出院后的访谈;以及出院后的邮寄和电话调查。与信息提供者(通常是孩子的母亲)的接触水平和接触频率差异很大。安抚奶嘴的使用被定义和测量不一致,这可能是因为很少有研究专门调查其与母乳喂养的关系。虽然已经解决了随访的完整性问题,但没有统一识别和解释缺失的数据。当比较参与者和非参与者时,存在一些证据表明存在差异丢失,并且存在偏向于社会经济地位较高的家庭的偏见。大多数研究都进行了多变量分析,其中一些研究包括大量的社会人口学、产科和婴儿混杂因素,而另一些研究只包括母亲的年龄和教育程度。由于定义和测量的不一致性,安抚奶嘴使用与母乳喂养之间的关系以许多不同的方式表达,因此不适合进行荟萃分析。总的来说,只有一项研究没有报告安抚奶嘴使用与母乳喂养持续时间或排他性之间的负面关联。结果表明,使用安抚奶嘴会增加母乳喂养总持续时间缩短的风险,从 20%增加到近三倍。数据表明,非常不频繁地使用安抚奶嘴可能不会对母乳喂养结果产生任何总体负面影响。

有 6 项婴儿猝死综合征病例对照研究符合纳入标准。研究于 1984 年至 1999 年在挪威、英国、新西兰、荷兰和美国进行。暴露信息是从多种来源获得的,包括:医院和产前记录、死亡现场调查以及访谈和问卷调查。病例的信息是在死亡后 2 天内、死亡后 2-4 周内以及在一项研究中在死亡后 3-11 年内获得的。对照的信息是在指定的婴儿猝死综合征病例发生后 4 天内,到病例日期后 1 到 7 周内,以及在一项研究中在 3 到 11 年内获得的。在大多数研究中,病例的确定是通过死后确定的。安抚奶嘴的使用再次被定义和测量有些不一致。所有研究都通过匹配和/或使用多变量分析来控制混杂因素。通常,产前和产后因素,以及婴儿护理实践、母亲、家庭和社会经济问题都被考虑在内。

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