At one month post-partum, mothers with higher prenatal breastfeeding intention scores were more likely to still be breastfeeding (85.7%), with the largest percentage of mothers still exclusively breastfeeding (50.0%). Additionally, mothers with lower prenatal breastfeeding intention scores were more likely to be exclusively formula feeding (14.3%). This finding was statistically significant using Fisher’s Exact test (p=0.03). At three and six months post-partum, mothers with high prenatal breastfeeding intention scores were also likely to still be breastfeeding, with a large percentage still exclusively breastfeeding; however, these finding were not statistically significant.