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Documents disponibles dans cette catégorie (300)
Article : texte imprimé
Susan Tawia, Auteur |The Australian Breastfeeding Association (ABA) has always supported mothers and their families during emergencies. The response of ABA to the needs of pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers and their families during the bushfire emergencies 2019/[...]texte imprimé
Concerned about making enough milk for your baby? Wondering how to make more? Two lactation experts are here to help. Separate fact from fiction with help from this comprehensive book about improving low milk supply. Written by two leading expe[...]Article : texte imprimé
The Business Case for Breastfeeding: A Successful Regional Implementation, Evaluation, and Follow-Up
Cheza C. Garvin, Auteur ; Natasha K. Sriraman, Auteur ; Amy Paulson, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding benefits the health of babies and mothers, but returning to work is a significant barrier for mothers wishing to continue breastfeeding for the recommended 12 months. A resource training kit, The Business Case for Breas[...]Article : texte imprimé
Susanne Madden, Auteur ; Beverly Curtis, Auteur |With the implementation of the Health Resources and Services Administration Women's Preventive Services Guidelines, which went into effective August 1, 2012, under the Affordable Care Act, healthcare insurance companies across the country have i[...]Article : texte imprimé
E Shaw, Auteur ; J Kaczorowski, Auteur |Breastfeeding rates among low-income women in the east-south-central United States are among the lowest in the country. This study examined the effect of a peer counseling program on breastfeeding initiation and duration in a low-income rural po[...]Article : texte imprimé
Soodabeh Aghababaei, Auteur ; Mansoureh Refaei, Auteur ; Ghodratallah Roshanaei, Auteur ; Seyedeh Mahdiyeh Rouhani Mahmoodabadi, Auteur ; Tahereh Heshmatian, Auteur |Introduction: Sexual problems have significant effects on individual sexual function. The aim of this study was to determine the effect of counseling on sexual function of lactating women with decreased sexual desire. Methods: This is a quasi[...]Article : texte imprimé
Roslyn Giglia, Auteur ; Colin Binns, Auteur |Breastfeeding is the normal and safest way to nurture an infant, and prolonged exclusive breastfeeding duration to 6 months will yield the greatest gains in optimum infant development. Despite this knowledge fewer than 35% of infants worldwide a[...]Article : texte imprimé
Aysun Eksioglu, Auteur ; Yesim Yesil, Auteur ; Dilek Demir Gungor, Auteur |Objective: This research investigated the effects of different breastfeeding training techniques for primiparous mothers before discharge on the incidence of cracked nipples. Materials and Methods: This was a controlled intervention study tha[...]Article : texte imprimé
Kate Bernie, Auteur |Background: Increasing rates of exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life is important to ensure that infants achieve optimal growth, development, and health and could generate over £40 million in annual savings for the National H[...]Article : texte imprimé
Barbara A. Dennison, Auteur ; Trang Q. Nguyen, Auteur ; Deborah J. Gregg, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding provides maternal and infant health benefits. Maternity care practices encompassed in the 10 Steps to Successful Breastfeeding are positively associated with improved breastfeeding outcomes. This study assessed changes [...]Article : texte imprimé
Background: A prenatal commitment to breastfeed is a strong predictor for breastfeeding success. Prenatal care providers have the opportunity to educate and promote breastfeeding. However, differences in education and training between healthcare[...]Article : texte imprimé
Georg'ann Cattelona, Auteur ; Carol A. Friesen, Auteur ; Laura J. Hormuth, Auteur |Bloomington Area Birth Services (BABS), centered in Bloomington, Indiana, is a community-based program that provides comprehensive education and support for new breastfeeding mothers, infants, family members, and the community by working togethe[...]Article : texte imprimé
In recent years, there has been renewed attention to the central role that clinicians and healthcare institutions can play to support women in initiating and sustaining breastfeeding through the first year of their infant's life. There has been,[...]Article : texte imprimé
Hiroko Hongo, Auteur ; J Green, Auteur ; Akira Shibanuma, Auteur |Background Peer support may help mothers to feel satisfied with their breastfeeding and to continue breastfeeding. However, previous researchers have not examined the influence of peer support on the three breastfeeding-satisfaction domains. [...]Article : texte imprimé
Heather B. Edelblute, Auteur ; Claire E. Altman, Auteur |Background: Behaviors related to early childhood nutrition are influenced by a mother's social environment. In many low- and middle-income countries, breastfeeding rates have steadily declined. At the same time, many communities have a history o[...]Article : texte imprimé
Georganna Cogburn, Auteur ; Mona Brown Ketner, Auteur |Professional organizations, including the World Health Organization, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, the Association of Womens Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses, the Academy of Nu[...]Article : texte imprimé
Background: Breastfeeding self-efficacy and breastfeeding intention are two modifiable factors that influence rates of breastfeeding initiation. Research Aims: (1) To develop a scale to measure prenatal breastfeeding self-efficacy, and (2) [...]Article : texte imprimé
A change toward family-focused care has begun in the Indian Health Service (IHS) beginning with Baby-Friendly designation (Table 1) and the ongoing work with breastfeeding care and support to Native American families. The Baby-Friendly hospital [...]Article : texte imprimé
Lea Pounds, Auteur ; Christopher M. Fisher, Auteur ; Debora Barnes-Josiah, Auteur |Introduction: Support of others is a key factor for mothers who choose to breastfeed their infants, including those who balance work outside the home and breastfeeding. However, little research has been done to understand how maternal support du[...]Article : texte imprimé
Mya Achike, Auteur ; Muge Akpinar-Elci, Auteur |Background: The benefits of breastfeeding are well established in the literature. Barriers related to breastfeeding, such as maternal obesity, are also cited in the literature. Worldwide obesity rates in women of reproductive age are rising at a[...]NouveautéArticle : texte imprimé
Jordyn T. Wallenborn, Auteur ; Gregory J. Chambers, Auteur ; Saba W. Masho, Auteur |Background: In the United States, less than a quarter of mothers breastfeed in accordance with national recommendations. To date, researchers have demonstrated that paternal support directly influences breastfeeding outcomes; however, healthcar[...]Article : texte imprimé
Hessa AlGhazal, Auteur ; Shehnaz Rashid, Auteur ; Evelyne Ruf, Auteur |Introduction: Breastfeeding promotion, protection, and support are one of the most cost-effective public health interventions to advance maternal and child health. The World Health Organization, the United Nations International Children's Emerge[...]Article : texte imprimé
In the late 19th-century United States and Europe, infants died at high rates from diarrhea. Physicians and social justice advocates responded to the public health crisis with attempts to clean up the water and cows milk supplies, as well as so[...]texte imprimé
Le Traité de l?allaitement maternel offre une information complète et à jour pour les personnes ressources en allaitement.Article : texte imprimé
Bhaskari Burra, Auteur ; Palika Datta, Auteur ; Kathleen Rewers-Felkins, Auteur ; Thomas W. Hale, Auteur |Introduction: Cyclobenzaprine is a skeletal muscle relaxant primarily used in the treatment of pain. Its use during lactation is a matter of concern as its level of exposure to infants through human milk is still unknown. Main issue: The ai[...]Article : texte imprimé
Gerardo Zamora, Auteur ; Chessa K. Lutter, Auteur ; Juan Pablo Peña-Rosas, Auteur |Over the past decades, research has progressed substantially regarding breastfeeding both as a human physiological process and as a social act (see note 1).1-3 Decades of research confirm the undisputable benefits of breastfeeding for infant and[...]Article : texte imprimé
Jessica A. Allen, Auteur ; Brook Belay, Auteur ; Perrine Cria G., Auteur |Background: Employer support is important for mothers, as returning to work is a common reason for discontinuing breastfeeding. This article explores support available to breastfeeding employees of hospitals that provide maternity care. Obje[...]Article : texte imprimé
Erin L. Austen, Auteur ; Julie Beadle, Auteur ; Sionnach Lukeman, Auteur |Background: North Americans are not meeting the World Health Organizations breastfeeding recommendations. Young adults understand that breastfeeding is healthy but are uncomfortable seeing breastfeeding. Research aim: The aim of the curren[...]Article : texte imprimé
Carol A. Friesen, Auteur ; Laura J. Hormuth, Auteur ; Devan Petersen, Auteur |The Tele-Lactation Pilot Project (TLPP), 1 of 13 community-based breastfeeding projects implemented in Indiana in 2013 using Centers for Disease Control and Prevention grant funds, explored the feasibility of using videoconferencing technology t[...]Article : texte imprimé
Antoinette Magner, Auteur ; Carrie Anne Phillipi, Auteur |In the United States, many women stop breastfeeding within the first month that they return to work. Working mothers experience challenges in maintaining milk supply and finding the time and space to express breast milk or feed their babies in w[...]Article : texte imprimé
Background: Although a woman's perception of her family members' support has long been established to be an influential factor on exclusive breastfeeding (EBF), it still has not been specified and quantified as a facilitator and guidance for pra[...]Article : texte imprimé
Yeon K. Bai, Auteur ; Lauren M Dinour, Auteur |Background: A proper assessment of multidimensional needs for breastfeeding mothers in various settings is crucial to facilitate and support breastfeeding and its exclusivity. The theory of planned behavior (TPB) has been used frequently to mea[...]Article : texte imprimé
document projeté ou vidéo
"La Voie Lactée est un exposé documentaire sur l'allaitement aux Etats-Unis et dans plusieurs pays. Le film donne aux femmes les informations, les arguments et les moyens d'avoir confiance en leur corps, en leur bébé, et en elles-mêmes pour réus[...]Article : texte imprimé
Rachel Schwartz, Auteur ; Amy Ellings, Auteur ; Amy Baisden, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding initiation in Washington State (Northwest United States) is high, yet rates plummet by 3 months postpartum. In the United States, national quality improvement (QI) efforts to improve breastfeeding outcomes have largely[...]Article : texte imprimé
Marie Dietrich Leurer, Auteur ; Janet McCabe, Auteur |Background Human milk expression, primarily by pump, is practiced by the majority of breastfeeding mothers in affluent countries. Existing literature is focused on determining prevalence and duration rates and the factors behind this trend. The[...]Article : texte imprimé
The lactation professional was born from the grassroots efforts of mothers who understood that to breastfeed successfully most women needed support and education. These were not available from the medical establishment or other societal entities[...]Article : texte imprimé
Ayse Oflu, Auteur |Objectives: The aim of this study is to determine the weaning practices of mothers who have children between the ages of 2 and 5 years. Materials and Methods: This study was designed as a cross-sectional descriptive study, which was carried o[...]Article : texte imprimé
Julie P. Smith, Auteur ; Alessandro Iellamo, Auteur |During emergencies and disasters infant survival can depend on their access to breastfeeding or human milk. Wet nursing and donor human milk sharing are options endorsed by the World Health Assembly (WHA). This study looks at regulatory environm[...]Article : texte imprimé
Amy Brown, Auteur |Background: Promoting breastfeeding is a strategic priority, but breastfeeding rates remain low in the United Kingdom. Women value breastfeeding promotion and education, but a different strategy may be needed to continue to raise breastfeeding r[...]Article : texte imprimé
Alison M. Stuebe, Auteur |In December, journalist Stephanie Murray published an essay entitled, No one talks about how difficult breastfeeding is. That's hurting all moms.1 She describes her early weeks of breastfeeding with clogged ducts and bleeding nipples, and she [...]texte imprimé
"A startlingly large number of women who want to breastfeed have to stop before they are ready, leaving them feeling a range of negative emotions, including grief, anger, guilt, shame and frustration, and often blaming themselves. But in a socie[...]Article : texte imprimé
Sandra Asantewaa Darfour-Oduro, Auteur ; Juhee Kim, Auteur |A low breastfeeding rate has been a consistent maternal and child health problem in the United States, especially for low-income families. Understanding mothers' social environment and overall well-being is important in determining how mothers w[...]Article : texte imprimé
Alice S. Teich, Auteur ; Josephine Barnett, Auteur ; Karen Bonuck, Auteur |Objectives: This study examined women's perceptions of early infant feeding experiences and identified early postpartum barriers to successful breastfeeding. Subjects and Methods: We conducted semistructured exit interviews at 6 months postpa[...]Article : texte imprimé
Alessandro Iellamo, Auteur ; Howard Sobel, Auteur ; Katrin Engelhardt, Auteur |Optimal breastfeeding saves lives. However, suboptimal breastfeeding is prevalent, primarily resulting from inappropriate promotion of infant formula and challenges of working mothers to continue breastfeeding. The article aims to determine the [...]Article : texte imprimé
Kailey Snyder, Auteur ; Sara Brown, Auteur ; Amyt Portratz, Auteur |Background: The majority of women are returning to work full-time after childbirth, and support within their place of employment may influence intention and duration for breastfeeding, but more research is needed. Therefore, the purpose of this [...]Article : texte imprimé
Yeon K. Bai, Auteur ; Susan I. Gaits, Auteur ; Shahla M. Wunderlich, Auteur |Background: Returning to an unsupportive work environment has been identified as a major reason for avoidance or early abandonment of breastfeeding among working mothers. Objective: This study aimed to examine the nature and extent of accom[...]Article : texte imprimé
Tyler Lennon, Auteur ; Dalvery Bakewell, Auteur ; Earnestine Willis, Auteur |Background: Workplace lactation support has become increasingly important because returning to work is associated with discontinuing breastfeeding and women in the workforce are increasing. Research aim: This study examined workplace lactat[...]Article : texte imprimé
Beth H. Olson, Auteur ; Madeleine Sigman-Grant, Auteur ; Michael T. Braun, Auteur |Introduction: Breastfeeding (BF) duration remains problematic, especially among women returning to work. Given that use of workplace lactation support programs has not gained traction in improving BF duration, there appears to be elements missin[...]