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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
Rebecca Hoban, Auteur ; Harold Bigger, Auteur ; Michael Schoeny, Auteur |Objective: This study sought to determine the maternal prepregnancy, pregnancy, and delivery risk factors that predicted coming to volume (CTV; achieving pumped mother's own milk [MOM] volume ≥500 mLs/day) and the continuation of MOM[...]Article : texte imprimé
Casey Rosen-Carole, Auteur ; Katherine Allen, Auteur ; Maria Fagnano, Auteur |Background: Preliminary qualitative research in upstate NY shows new mothers are worried about safety while breastfeeding. Little is known regarding prevalence of these concerns and their effect on breastfeeding outcomes. Objectives: (1) Dete[...]Article : texte imprimé
Elizabeth M. Miller, Auteur ; Adetola F. Louis-Jacques, Auteur ; Tara F. Deubel, Auteur |Background: Despite strides made by the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative to improve and normalize breastfeeding, considerable racial inequality persists in breastfeeding rates. Few studies have explored African American womens experience in a[...]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
Elizabeth A. Brownell, Auteur ; Mary M. Lussier, Auteur ; Donna Bielecki, Auteur |Background: Previous research has not evaluated predictors of donor human milk (DHM) non-consent status in a neonatal intensive care unit (ICU) setting within the United States. The purpose of this study is to identify and describe maternal and [...]Article : texte imprimé
Rebecca Reno, Auteur |Background: Increasing breastfeeding rates among low-income African American women may work toward the achievement of health equity. The dynamic breastfeeding assessment process (D-BAP) is a community-grounded, equity-focused intervention desig[...]Article : texte imprimé
Lisa Marie Piwoszkin, Auteur ; Megan Corley, Auteur ; Karthikeyan Meganathan, Auteur |Background: Breast milk reduces morbidity and mortality in infants admitted to neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Objectives: We determined predictors of procuring mother's own milk (MOM) among NICU-admitted newbornmother dyads: (1) initia[...]Article : texte imprimé
Ellen M Chetwynd, Auteur ; Alison M. Stuebe, Auteur ; Lynn Rosenberg, Auteur |Background: The incidence of diabetes is rising, and with it, the number of pregnancies affected by diabetes. U.S. black women have a disproportionately high prevalence of diabetes and lower rates of breastfeeding. Objective: The objective of[...]Article : texte imprimé
Saba W. Masho, Auteur ; Susan Cha, Auteur ; Michelle R. Morris, Auteur |Background: Prepregnancy overweight/obesity can adversely affect breastfeeding initiation, but studies examining this association among different racial/ethnic groups of U.S. women are limited. This study used a large, nationally representative [...]Article : texte imprimé
Tara P. Fischer, Auteur ; Beth H. Olson, Auteur |Background: The presence of barriers is not sufficient to explain breastfeeding rate disparities. A relatively unexplored area in coping with breastfeeding barriers is culture. Objective: This research aims to better understand the role of [...]Article : texte imprimé
Katherine M. Jones, Auteur ; Michael L. Power, Auteur ; John T. Queenan, Auteur |This article's aim is to review the literature on racial and ethnic disparities in breastfeeding rates and practices, address barriers to breastfeeding among minority women, conduct a systematic review of breastfeeding interventions, and provide[...]Article : texte imprimé
Catasha Davis, Auteur ; Aubrey Van Kirk Villalobos, Auteur ; Monique Mitchell Turner, Auteur |Background: Nearly 75% of Black non-Hispanic babies born in 2016 ever breastfed. However, Black mothers still experience barriers to breastfeeding, perpetuating disparities in exclusivity and duration. Subjects and Methods: Using data collect[...]Article : texte imprimé
Kimarie Bugg, Auteur ; George Bugg Jr., Auteur |Reaching Our Sisters Everywhere, Inc. (ROSE) is at the forefront of a movement to encourage African American mothers to embrace breastfeeding as a cultural and social norm. African American women initiate breastfeeding at about 58%, and by 6 mon[...]Article : texte imprimé
Onize Oniwon, Auteur ; Jennifer A.F. Tender, Auteur ; Jianping He, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding rates for low-income, African American infants remain low. Objective: This study aimed to determine the barriers, support, and influences for infant feeding decisions among women enrolled in the Washington, DC, Spe[...]Article : texte imprimé
Angela Marie Johnson, Auteur ; Rena Menke, Auteur ; Jonathan Eliahu Handelzalts, Auteur |Objective: Although breastfeeding provides benefits for mothers and infants, multiple factors prevent women from breastfeeding. This article aims to explore the role of mothers' personal and contextual risk factors to breastfeeding rates with a [...]Article : texte imprimé
Shelley Thibeau, Auteur ; Karen D'Apolito, Auteur ; Ann F. Minnick, Auteur |Background: In the United States, African American infants experience the highest mortality, and their mothers report the lowest breastfeeding rates. Science reports decreased infant mortality among breastfed infants and suggests that milk immun[...]Article : texte imprimé
CM Wiemann, Auteur ; J Dubois, Auteur ; B Berenson, Auteur |Objective: To identify characteristics of adolescent mothers who bottle-feed who considered breast-feeding their infants and strategies to promote breast-feeding within this special group. Design: Adolescents completed an hour-long interview wit[...]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
Carol A. Friesen, Auteur ; Laura J. Hormuth, Auteur ; Terry J. Curtis, Auteur |In 2012, the Indiana Black Breastfeeding Coalition (IBBC) used grant funds to increase participation in the Bosom Buddy Project, an original breastfeeding support group that pairs breastfeeding mothers with trained mentors. Resources for local o[...]Article : texte imprimé
Elise Bream, Auteur ; Hong Li, Auteur ; Lydia Furman, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding is the optimal form of infant nutrition, yet national rates are below recommendations with persistent disparities. Breast pumps may address the reasons that mothers discontinue breastfeeding. Objectives: To determine[...]Article : texte imprimé
Kimberly Fryer, Auteur ; Hudson P. SantosJr., Auteur ; Cort Pedersen, Auteur |Background: Breastfeeding has multiple benefits for both mother and infant. Previous studies have shown that Hispanic/Latina women have higher rates of breastfeeding and better health outcomes than non-Hispanic black (NHB) women of similar socio[...]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 [...]Article : texte imprimé
Sahira Long, Auteur |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[...]Article : texte imprimé
Lyshsae Otarola, Auteur ; Jamilia Sly, Auteur ; Taisha Manigat, Auteur |Introduction: Despite the tremendous health benefits for both mother and infant, black women (including African Americans and those who self-identify as black) have lower rates of breastfeeding than all other racial groups. Historically, matriar[...]