Titre : | Breastfeeding Medicine, Vol. 16, n°2 - Février 2021 |
Type de document : | Bulletin : texte imprimé |
Paru le : | 01/02/2021 |
Année de publication : | 2021 |
Format : | 89 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Note de contenu : |
Editorial :
Breastfeeding Medicine and Black History Month: Studies on the African American Experience and Breastfeeding Guest Editorial : The Peculiar Indifference to Breastfeeding Disparities in the African American Community Review : Black/African American Breastfeeding Experience: Cultural, Sociological, and Health Dimensions Through an Equity Lens Perspectives : Structural Racism and Barriers to Breastfeeding on Chicagoland's South Side The Historical, Psychosocial, and Cultural Context of Breastfeeding in the African American Community Breastfeeding Communities for Fatherhood: Laying the Groundwork for the Black Fatherhood, Brotherhood, and Manhood Movement Original Research Articles : Infant Feeding Exposure and Personal Experiences of African American Mothers #EveryGenerationMatters: Intergenerational Perceptions of Infant Feeding Information and Communication Among African American Women Disparities in Breastfeeding Among U.S. Black Mothers: Identification of Mechanisms Racial Disparities in Sustaining Breastfeeding in a Baby-Friendly Designated Southeastern United States Hospital: An Opportunity to Investigate Systemic Racism African American Breastfeeding Peer Support: All Moms Empowered to Nurse Breastfeeding Sisters That Are Receiving Support: Community-Based Peer Support Program Created for and by Women of Color |
Dépouillements
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panierArticle : texte imprimé
Breastfeeding Medicine is thus honored to be dedicating this special issue, as part of Black History month, to focus on this continuing scar of the U.S. society in general and its health care system in particular. Guest edited by Dr. Sahira Long[...]
Article : texte imprimé
Sahira Long, Auteur
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In June 2019, after the U.S. Breastfeeding Committee African American/Black Identity Caucus meeting, a group of participants discussed the possibility of writing an article together on the topic of Black breastfeeding disparities and solutions t[...]
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Background: Disparities in breastfeeding (BF) continue to be a public health challenge, as currently only 42% of infants in the world and 25.6% of infants in the United States are exclusively breastfed for the first 6 months of life. In 2019, th[...]
Article : texte imprimé
For African American (AA) families on Chicagoland's South Side who choose to breastfeed, finding and receiving services needed to reach their goals are difficult. The disparities in breastfeeding support across Chicagoland are symptomatic of ine[...]
Article : texte imprimé
Breastfeeding provides a range of benefits for the infant's growth, immunity, and development. It also has health benefits for the mother, including a reduced risk of premenopausal breast cancer, earlier return to prepregnancy weight, reduction [...]
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The role fathers play in the lives of their children is, as any behavior, dependent on their knowledge of factors influencing the health and safety of children and the societal context in which those fathers live, work, and worship. In the conte[...]
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Background: Although exposure and personal experiences can guide breastfeeding decisions, the extant research on African American mothers is limited regarding the influence of infant feeding exposure. The persistent race-based breastfeeding disp[...]
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Objective: African American (AA) women look to their mother and maternal grandmother for parenting information and support; this intergenerational communication may reinforce or hinder breastfeeding practices. Rooted in Black Feminist Thought, t[...]
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Objective: Disparities in U.S. breastfeeding rates persist among Black mothers according to birth country and between Black and White mothers, necessitating further investigation of modifiable mediating factors to inform interventions. This stud[...]
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Background: Racial disparities in breastfeeding rates persist in the United States with Black women having the lowest rates of initiation and continuation. A literature review attributes this to many factorshistorical roles, cultural norms, lac[...]
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Background: Although breastfeeding is optimal infant nutrition, disparities in breastfeeding persist in the African American population. AMEN (Avondale Moms Empowered to Nurse) launched a Peer-to-Peer support group to increase breastfeeding init[...]
Article : texte imprimé
Substantial racial disparities accounted for 66% of non-Hispanic Black mothers initiating breastfeeding in 2015 compared with 83% of non-Hispanic white mothers and 87% of Hispanic mothers in Tennessee. Created in 2015, Breastfeeding Sisters That[...]
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Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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00379 | PE | Revue | IPA | Périodiques | Disponible |