Literature DB >> 10941319

Breastfeeding and Chinese mothers living in Australia.

S Diong1, M Johnson, R Langdon.   

Abstract

This study sought information on the breastfeeding rates, knowledge and beliefs of 101 migrant Chinese mothers living in south-west Sydney. Differences in beliefs about breastfeeding and bottle-feeding practices between migrant and indigenous groups of mothers were also examined. Sixty-five percent of Chinese mothers were fully breastfeeding their infants on discharge, with a further 6.9% partially breastfeeding. However, only 34% were still breastfeeding at three months. The most important factor to influence mothers' choice to breastfeed was the belief that it was 'good for the baby', whilst mothers choosing to bottle-feed were influenced by low milk supply and the belief that it was easier. Similar beliefs about breastfeeding and bottle-feeding were held by indigenous and migrant Chinese mothers, although concerns about the baby becoming too attached were markedly higher in the migrant group and may be related to sudden drops in breastfeeding rates at three months. Focusing ethno-specific services upon continuation of breastfeeding throughout the first six months of the infant's life is recommended, with a Chinese mothers' breastfeeding support network being posed as a possible approach.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2000        PMID: 10941319

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breastfeed Rev        ISSN: 0729-2759


  9 in total

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7.  Differences in infant feeding practices between Chinese-born and Australian-born mothers living in Australia: a cross-sectional study.

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8.  Longitudinal analysis of growth trajectories in young children of Chinese-born immigrant mothers compared with Australian-born mothers living in Victoria, Australia.

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9.  Development and evaluation of a Chinese-language newborn feeding hotline: a prospective cohort study.

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  9 in total

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