Mothers' and Health Care Professionals' Experiences of Remote Provision of One-to-One Synchronous Breastfeeding Support: A Qualitative Systematic Review

Asia Pac J Public Health. 2026 May 9:10105395261437273. doi: 10.1177/10105395261437273. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Breastfeeding has been shown to provide numerous benefits for mothers and babies in the short and long term. During the COVID-19 pandemic, breastfeeding support, which was traditionally provided offline, shifted to online platforms. Although these remote services were available before the pandemic began, online interventions emerged as an alternative and proved effective in helping mothers breastfeed during that period. We aimed to explore the existing literature on the experiences of mothers and health care professionals with remote one-to-one synchronous breastfeeding support and to identify the unmet support needs of mothers regarding this type of support. We systematically searched seven literature databases: MEDLINE, CINAHL Plus, MIDIRS, Web of Science, ASSIA, WHO Global Index, and Google Search. Articles published before 2010 and in languages other than English and Bahasa were excluded. A thematic approach was used to synthesise the data. Twenty-one studies were included in this review. Three themes generated from the synthesis: (1) mothers' acceptance of one-to-one synchronous telelactation, (2) benefit of one-to-one synchronous telelactation, and (3) challenges faced in one-to-one synchronous telelactation. In conclusion, mothers generally accepted one-to-one synchronous breastfeeding support as an alternative to in-person sessions, although some challenges remain. Further improvements are needed to address accessibility and scheduling issues.

Keywords: health care professionals’ support; lactation counselling; online breastfeeding support; qualitative systematic review; telelactation.

Publication types

  • Review