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Breastfeeding support for women with HIV: lactation consultant HIV-knowledge, attitudes, stigma, and tele-lactation experiences

  • Emily Barr
  • , Lisa Abuogi
  • , Mary Lingwall
  • , Qian Qian
  • , Leah Anthony
  • , Joanna Vennekotter
  • , Elizabeth D. Lowenthal
  • , Hulin Wu
  • , Tianheng Zhang
  • , Rebecca Tsusaki
  • , Jennifer Mckinney
  • University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
  • University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston
  • University of Houston
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Baylor College of Medicine

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective(s): – To characterize lactation consultants’(LCs) HIV-related knowledge, attitudes, stigma, and tele-lactation experience relevant to supporting pregnant and postpartum people with HIV (PP-PWH). Design: – Cross-sectional mixed-methods study of lactation consultants. Methods: – We conducted a mixed-methods survey of certified LCs in the United States and Canada. Quantitative measures assessed general HIV knowledge, HIV breastfeeding-specific knowledge, attitudes toward breastfeeding among PP-PWH, HIV-related stigma, and tele-lactation experience using validated instruments. Multivariable regression models examined associations between provider characteristics, knowledge, stigma, and attitudes. Qualitative free-text responses were analyzed thematically using the Health Stigma and Discrimination Framework, with findings integrated to contextualize quantitative results. Results: – The sample included 207 internationally certified LCs, most of whom reported no or limited clinical experience supporting PP-PWH. General HIV knowledge was high, while HIV-specific breastfeeding knowledge was moderate. Higher HIV-specific knowledge was independently associated with prior experience supporting PP-PWH and awareness of updated infant-feeding recommendations, whereas years in practice and general HIV knowledge were not. HIV-related stigma levels were generally low; lower stigma was associated with greater support for patient autonomy but more cautious endorsement of breastfeeding in high-resource settings. Tele-lactation experience was common. Qualitative findings emphasized strong support for patient autonomy and nonjudgmental, informed counseling, alongside high willingness to learn and engage in additional training to better support PP-PWH. Conclusions: – LCs are motivated to support PP-PWH but face HIV-specific knowledge gaps and structural challenges shaping preparedness and counseling practices. Targeted education, clear guidance, and integration of tele-lactation within HIV care systems may strengthen equitable, person-centered lactation support.

Original languageEnglish
Article number10.1097/QAD.0000000000004466
JournalAIDS
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2026

Keywords

  • breastfeeding
  • chestfeeding
  • HIV
  • infant feeding
  • lactation consultants
  • perinatal HIV transmission
  • stigma
  • telehealth
  • women and HIV

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