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Bulletin : texte imprimé
Breastfeeding Medicine, Vol. 13, n°2 - Mars 2018
2018Editorial - Exclusive Breastfeeding and Complementary Feedings Are Not Mutually Exclusive LactMed® Update - Treating Hypertension During Breastfeeding Clinical Research - Implementation and Organization of a Perioperative Lactation Prog[...]Bulletin : texte imprimé
Hot Milk, n°13 - Automne 2018
2018Article : texte imprimé
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
"we have the pleasure of meeting two pionneers in mother-to-mother support of breastfeeding women, Marian Thompson and Mary-Ann Kerwin". [extrait de l'article]Article : texte imprimé
Despite benefits to breastfeeding, the frequency of exclusive breastfeeding is less than recommended and most mothers discontinue breastfeeding earlier than recommended. A mother's experience of breastfeeding could affect how long she breastfeed[...]Article : texte imprimé
Sera Young, Auteur ; Sebalda Leshabari, Auteur ; Chaele Arkfeld, Auteur |Background: For the past decade, heat-treating breastmilk has been an infant feeding option recommended by the World Health Organization as a strategy to reduce vertical transmission. However, little is known about field experiences with it. Our[...]Article : texte imprimé
Lauren M Dinour, Auteur ; Gina A. Pope, Auteur ; Yeon K. Bai, Auteur |Background: Compared to nonemployed mothers, employed mothers are more likely to terminate breastfeeding sooner than recommended, due in part to a lack of workplace support. Objective: The purpose of this study is to compare the beliefs of [...]Article : texte imprimé
Robyn M. Powell, Auteur ; Monika Mitra, Auteur ; Suzanne C. Smeltzer, Auteur |Background: The benefits of breastfeeding are well established, and breastfeeding is now widely practiced in the United States. Although increasing numbers of women with physical disabilities are having children, little information is available[...]Article : texte imprimé
The women who volunteer as breastfeeding counsellors with the Australian Breastfeeding Association may reasonably be supposed to have achieved a satisfying breastfeeding relationship. Many have had difficulties with breastfeeding, but they have [...]Article : texte imprimé
Deborah J. Gregg, Auteur ; Barbara A. Dennison, Auteur ; Kyle Restina, Auteur |Community-based lactation support groups help improve breastfeeding duration by offering practical peer and professional help and counseling through the sharing of information and experiences in a relaxed setting. The objective of this project, [...]Article : texte imprimé
Harumi Reis-Reilly, Auteur ; Nikia Fuller-Sankofa, Auteur ; Calondra Tibbs, Auteur |To improve equity in breastfeeding rates and eliminate breastfeeding disparities, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Division of Nutrition, Physical Activity, and Obesity in 2014 funded the National Association of County and City He[...]Article : texte imprimé
Kevin Wong, Auteur ; Punam Patel, Auteur ; Michael B. Cohen, Auteur |Introduction: Breastfeeding difficulty from ankyloglossia can affect both the mother and baby in a breastfeeding dyad. With renewed emphasis in today's culture on breast milk, mothers may feel increasing pressure to breastfeed, and the inability[...]Article : texte imprimé
Nicole Bridges, Auteur ; Gwyneth Howell, Auteur ; Virginia Schmied, Auteur |Employing an online ethnographic research approach, the purpose of this study was to describe the nature of breastfeeding peer support that members seek and receive via closed Facebook groups facilitated by the Australian Breastfeeding Associati[...]Article : texte imprimé
Alena Clark, Auteur ; Susan S. Baker, Auteur ; Kathryn McGirr, Auteur |Background: Research has shown that women with low socioeconomic status and lack of breastfeeding support often breastfeed for shorter durations. Little research has been done on the effects of a breastfeeding peer support program for women from[...]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[...]Article : texte imprimé
Elizabeth Hegedus, Auteur ; Diana J. Oakes, Auteur ; Majella Hill, Auteur ; Helen E. Ritchie, Auteur ; Debra S. Kennedy, Auteur |Background: MotherSafe is a free telephone-based counseling service for Australian consumers and health care providers concerned about drug exposures during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Calls relating to breastfeeding are relatively common and a[...]Article : texte imprimé
Ganga L. Srinivas, Auteur ; Mary Benson, Auteur ; Sarah Worley, Auteur |Background: Whereas breastfeeding initiation rates have risen in all groups throughout the country, rates of breastfeeding duration have changed more slowly. Peer counseling has had some success in sustaining breastfeeding, but with intensive p[...]Article : texte imprimé
Aurora Fernández-Cañadas Morillo, Auteur ; Duque Modesto Durán, Auteur ; Ana B. Hernández López, Auteur |Aim: To analyze the association of labor and sociodemographic factors with cessation of exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) at 3 and 6 months of life. Materials and Methods: A prospective cohort study (n = 529) was performed in a tertia[...]Article : texte imprimé
Nicola Geoghegan-Morphet, Auteur ; Doris Yuen, Auteur ; Esther Rai, Auteur |Exclusive breastfeeding is the optimal method of infant feeding for the first 6 months of life for both term and preterm infants. This recommendation is based on indisputable evidence that breastfeeding offers numerous infant and maternal health[...]Article : texte imprimé
Laurie B. Jones, Auteur ; Emily A. Mallin, Auteur |Dr. MILK® (Mothers Interested in Lactation Knowledge) is an online and in-person support network to help physician mothers achieve their personal breastfeeding goals. Physician mothers have been defined as a high-risk breastfeeding group because[...]Article : texte imprimé
Engaging African American Parents to Develop a Mobile Health Technology for Breastfeeding: KULEA-NET
Loral Patchen, Auteur ; Lindsey Ellis, Auteur |Background African Americans breastfeed less than other groups, which has implications for health throughout the life course. Little is known about mobile health technologies to support breastfeeding. Research aims This study proceeded in t[...]Article : texte imprimé
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[...]Article : texte imprimé
Examining the Baby Café Model and Mothers' Breastfeeding Duration, Meeting of Goals, and Exclusivity
Lucia A. Jenkins, Auteur ; Katie Barnes, Auteur ; Angela Latter, Auteur ; Roger A. Edwards, Auteur |Objective: Accessible community lactation support impacts a woman's breastfeeding success by offering timely intervention and solutions, thereby allowing mothers to achieve breastfeeding goals and improve overall breastfeeding rates. Although th[...]Article : texte imprimé
Maryanne Tigchelaar Perrin, Auteur ; Suzanne L. Goodell, Auteur ; April Fogleman, Auteur |Background: Lactating women in the United States have several options for what they do with excess breast milk, including donating to milk banks that serve medically fragile infants, sharing directly with families seeking milk, and selling to i[...]Article : texte imprimé
This research explored what a charity can do through their Facebook communication, to build stronger online relationships that, in turn, motivate followers to develop real-world relationships (ie group meeting attendance, volunteering, training,[...]Article : texte imprimé
Rosann Edwards, Auteur ; Wendy Peterson, Auteur ; Joy Noel-Weiss, Auteur |Background: Young mothers have the lowest breastfeeding rates in Canada. Young mothers and their infants who access maternity shelters are especially at risk for poor outcomes, some of which breastfeeding may help to mitigate, yet little is kno[...]Article : texte imprimé
Raychelle Phoebe, Auteur ; Catherine M. Fetherston, Auteur ; Caroline Nilson, Auteur ; Catherine M. Fetherston |Background: A range of supports are required to protect and promote breastfeeding and although Australia boasts high initiation rates, these supports have not yet been able to increase duration of breastfeeding to achieve national and global tar[...]Article : texte imprimé
Tony H. Grubesic, Auteur ; Kelly M. Durbin, Auteur |Background Mother-to-mother breastfeeding support organizations provide important information and guidance for helping mothers initiate and maintain breastfeeding, postpartum. However, the availability of this support is limited by a constellat[...]Article : texte imprimé
Beatriz M. Reyes-Foster, Auteur ; Shannon K. Carter, Auteur ; Melanie Sberna Hinojosa, Auteur |Background: Peer milk sharing, the noncommercial sharing of human milk from one parent or caretaker directly to another for the purposes of feeding a child, appears to be an increasing infant-feeding practice. Although the U.S. Food and Drug Ad[...]Article : texte imprimé
Beverly Rossman, Auteur ; Paula P Meier, Auteur ; Judy E Janes, Auteur |Introduction: Breastfeeding rates are virtually unknown for teen mothers whose low-birth-weight (LBW;Article : texte imprimé
Kelly S. McGlothen, Auteur ; Lisa M. Cleveland, Auteur ; Sara L. Gill, Auteur |Background: Several professional health organizations have made statements endorsing the safety of breastfeeding for women taking medication-assisted treatment for an opioid use disorder. Yet, breastfeeding initiation rates for this population [...]Article : texte imprimé
The process by which women came to donate milk via online milk sharing networks was explored via a questionnaire administered to 97 peer milk donors. Seventy-one respondents stated that they were motivated to donate milk because they wanted to h[...]Article : texte imprimé
Jordyn T. Wallenborn, Auteur ; David C. Wheeler, Auteur ; Juan Lu, Auteur ; Robert A. Perera, Auteur ; Saba W. Masho, Auteur |Background: Multiple types of individuals compose a mother's social support network. Women may value opinions of individuals' within their support network differently. Our study examined the relationship between breastfeeding opinions from indiv[...]Article : texte imprimé
Rukhsana Haider, Auteur ; Virginia Thorley, Auteur ; Seema Mihrshahi, Auteur |Sub-optimal feeding practices contribute towards malnutrition in young infants and children. Building upon successfully improving breastfeeding practices through peer counselling in Bangladesh, starting from 1995, this project tested if compleme[...]Article : texte imprimé
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[...]texte imprimé
40 articles de la conférence internationale sur l'allaitement maternel et le féminisme de 2013, autour de lidée d'élever des enfants est un bien social et que nos villages peuvent soutenir les femmes en les aidant à intégrer le maternage à l[...]Article : texte imprimé
Dare Henry-Moss, Auteur ; Stephanie Abbuhl, Auteur ; Lisa Bellini, Auteur |Background: Comprehensive workplace lactation support programs can reduce the risk for early breastfeeding discontinuation; however, scant evidence is available to inform user-centered design of employee lactation spaces. This study describes he[...]Article : texte imprimé
Rebecca J. McCloskey, Auteur ; Sharvari Karandikar, Auteur |Background: Human milk sharing between peers is a common and growing practice. Although human milk has been unequivocally established as the ideal food source for infants, much stigma surrounds the practice of human milk sharing. Furthermore, t[...]Article : texte imprimé
Long-Term Breastfeeding in African American Mothers: A Positive Deviance Inquiry of WIC Participants
Tyra Toston Gross, Auteur ; Marsha Davis, Auteur ; Alex K. Anderson, Auteur |Background: According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 39.1% of African American infants are breastfed at 6 months. However, few studies have explored the breastfeeding experiences of African American women who successfully br[...]Article : texte imprimé
Key Messages Responding to a recently published case study, in this Insights into Practice the author examines evidence for the use of medications including estrogen, domperidone and spironolactone as part of breastfeeding support for transgend[...]Article : texte imprimé
Rigoberto I. Delgado, Auteur ; Sara L. Gill, Auteur |Background: This article focuses on the costs of opening and running a Baby Café. A Baby Café is an intervention that focuses on providing peer-to-peer support for breastfeeding mothers. Research aim: This study aimed to estimate the costs [...]Article : texte imprimé
Maryanne Tigchelaar Perrin, Auteur ; Suzanne L. Goodell, Auteur ; Jonathan C. Allen, Auteur |Objectives: The Food and Drug Administration discourages the casual sharing of human milk because of the risk of pathogen transmission. No information is currently available on the prevalence of this practice. The purpose of this mixed-methods o[...]Article : texte imprimé
Breastfeeding is important for providing optimal infant nutrition and protection from many infectious and non-infectious conditions (Allen, Perrin, and Fogleman, 2013; Eidelman and Schanler, 2012). It is an ancient, but simple, public health mea[...]Article : texte imprimé
Miranda L. Buck, Auteur ; Lisa H. Amir, Auteur ; Karalyn McDonald, Auteur |Background: Although most Australian mothers initiate breastfeeding and some continue to breastfeed through exceptional difficulties, 50% stop breastfeeding before they had originally planned to. While studies have explored women's experiences o[...]Article : texte imprimé
Angela Marie Johnson, Auteur ; Rosalind Kirk, Auteur ; Maria Muzik, Auteur |Background: Persistent racial disparities in breastfeeding show that African American women breastfeed at the lowest rates. Return to work is a critical breastfeeding barrier for African American women who return to work sooner than other ethni[...]Article : texte imprimé
Mary R. Rozga, Auteur ; Jean M. Kerver, Auteur ; Beth H. Olson, Auteur |Background: Peer counseling (PC) breastfeeding support programs have proven effective in increasing breastfeeding duration in low-income women. Objectives: This study aimed to describe program participants and breastfeeding duration in a PC[...]Article : texte imprimé
Jessica Eve Jackson, Auteur ; Jenny Hallam, Auteur ; La Leche League France, Traducteur |Article : texte imprimé
Mary R. Rozga, Auteur ; Jean M. Kerver, Auteur ; Beth H. Olson, Auteur |Background: Peer counseling programs have demonstrated efficacy in improving breastfeeding rates in the low-income population, but there is little research concerning why women enrolled in these programs ultimately discontinue breastfeeding. [...]Article : texte imprimé
Ellen J. Schafer, Auteur ; Natalie A. Williams, Auteur ; Siri Digney, Auteur |Background: Infant feeding takes place within a network of social relationships. However, the social context in which infant feeding advice is received remains underresearched. Objective: The objective of this study was to evaluate the soci[...]Article : texte imprimé
Jennifer M. Schindler-Ruwisch, Auteur ; Amira Roess, Auteur ; Rebecca C. Robert, Auteur |Background: Several barriers to successful breastfeeding exist, including a lack of support from peers or professionals. With the emergence of mobile health (mHealth) tools to provide additional breastfeeding support, a more thorough review of [...]Article : texte imprimé
Amanda Reat, Auteur ; Krystin J Matthews, Auteur ; Alma E. Carver, Auteur |Background Although the reasons for discontinued breastfeeding are multifactorial, an unsupportive work environment is consistently reported as a barrier to continued breastfeeding. In the United States, several state breastfeeding advocates ha[...]Article : texte imprimé
R Haider, Auteur |Background Thirty-six percent of females are employed in Bangladesh, many in the readymade garments manufacturing industry. Inadequate access to health information, care, and long working hours makes exclusive breastfeeding particularly challen[...]Article : texte imprimé
Rema Ramakrishnan, Auteur ; Charles N. Oberg, Auteur ; Russell S. Kirby, Auteur |Background: Exclusive breastfeeding is recommended for 6 months. Successful breastfeeding requires support from family members, peers, and health care professionals. Objective: This study aimed to determine the association between maternal [...]Article : texte imprimé
Renee Kam, Auteur ; Nerida Haines, Auteur |Australian Breastfeeding Association (ABA) volunteers provide telephone breastfeeding support to Australian mothers via their National Breastfeeding Helpline, supported by funding from the Australian Government. ABA conducts annual caller and vo[...]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/[...]Article : texte imprimé
Tyler Lennon, Auteur ; Dalvery Bakewell, Auteur ; Earnestine Willis, Auteur |Throughout this nation, many businesses do not have a lactation policy, designated lactation space, or accommodations for women to use a breast pump. In 2009, a large survey found that only 25% of businesses had a lactation program or made speci[...]Article : texte imprimé
Most mothers stop breast-feeding before the recommended 6 months post partum. A systematic review showed that breast-feeding support programs by health care professionals did not substantially improve breast-feeding outcomes beyond 2 months post[...]Article : document cartographique imprimé
Nicole Bridges, Auteur |The aim of this study was to advance understanding of the experiences of mothers using closed Facebook groups attached to the Australian Breastfeeding Association (ABA) and how these mothers find and share breastfeeding support and information u[...]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
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 : document cartographique imprimé
Beryne Mikal Odeny, Auteur ; James Pfeiffer, Auteur ; Carey Farquhar, Auteur |Background: Exclusive breastfeeding (EBF) means giving only breast milk to an infant. Although it is the optimal mode of feeding for infants younger than 6 months, its prevalence is low in HIV-endemic regions. Extensive promotion of EBF for 6 mo[...]texte imprimé
The Virtual Breastfeeding Culture: Seeking Mother-to-Mother Support in the Digital Age illustrates that since the advent of the digital communication, mothers have been using the Internet to support and connect with each other. Women have claime[...]Article : texte imprimé
Yasmeen I. Lee, Auteur ; Stephanie Baker, Auteur |Introduction: The World Health Organization recommends 6 months of exclusive breastfeeding for infants. Racial disparities exist, where only 27.9% of black women exclusively breastfeed at 6 months compared to 45.1% of white mothers. Previous res[...]Article : texte imprimé
Key Messages Breastfeeding counselors understand that how they address feeding method benefits and risks can affect how clients receive and respond to the information. This author proposes a new approach. Infant feeding research, properly fo[...]NouveautéArticle : 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
Tyra T. Gross, Auteur ; Rachel Powell, Auteur ; Alex K. Anderson, Auteur |Background: African American women have the lowest breastfeeding rates among all racial/ethnic groups in the United States. Peer counseling is an effective intervention in improving breastfeeding in this population. However, little is known on [...]