| Literature DB >> 16113020 |
Karen A Bonuck1, Kathy Freeman, Michelle Trombley.
Abstract
This article reports on breastfeeding intentions of Hispanic and black women by country of origin (continental US born or foreign born) in a low-income population that has experienced demographic shifts. Data were derived from prenatal interviews with 382 women from 2 community clinics. Primary outcome measures were intentions to formula feed, breastfeed, or formula and breastfeed. Foreign-born women were significantly more likely to intend to only breastfeed (42% vs 24% for continental US born, P < .05). In multivariate analyses, country of origin and having breastfed a previous child were the only significant predictors of breastfeeding intention. In contrast to previous work, black (non-Hispanic) and Hispanic women's breastfeeding plans were similar. This finding coincides with dramatic increases in the numbers of blacks from West Indian countries-where breastfeeding is the norm-in the study locale.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16113020 DOI: 10.1177/0890334405278249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Lact ISSN: 0890-3344 Impact factor: 2.219