Literature DB >> 19068054

Shattered expectations: when mothers' confidence in breastfeeding is undermined--a metasynthesis.

Jette Schilling Larsen1, Elisabeth O C Hall, Hanne Aagaard.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Why do mothers give up breastfeeding, even though breastfeeding has great importance to them? This study examines what has affected mother's confidence in breastfeeding when she gives up breastfeeding.
METHOD: A metasynthesis of seven studies on mothers' experiences with breastfeeding was conducted using Noblit and Hare's methodological approach.
RESULTS: The metasynthesis shows that confidence in breastfeeding is shaped by shattered expectations and is affected on an immediate level by mothers' expectations, the network and the breastfeeding experts and on a discourse level by the discourses: breastfeeding as nature, the female body as a machine and the note of caution. Foucault's concept of discourse is used to discuss how these discourses affect mothers' confidence in breastfeeding by giving the right to speak about breastfeeding to the breastfeeding experts, by isolating the mothers who do not breastfeed and by organizing knowledge about breastfeeding in a certain way.
CONCLUSIONS: The individual mother is responsible for the success of breastfeeding and the discourses are hiding that general perceptions of breastfeeding undermines the mothers' confidence in breastfeeding and leads to shattered expectations.

Mesh:

Year:  2008        PMID: 19068054     DOI: 10.1111/j.1471-6712.2007.00572.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Caring Sci        ISSN: 0283-9318


  20 in total

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6.  'It should be the most natural thing in the world': exploring first-time mothers' breastfeeding difficulties in the UK using audio-diaries and interviews.

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7.  Women's sense of coherence related to their infant feeding experiences.

Authors:  Gill Thomson; Fiona Dykes
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8.  Breastfeeding: An existential challenge-women's lived experiences of initiating breastfeeding within the context of early home discharge in Sweden.

Authors:  Lina Palmér; Gunilla Carlsson; Margareta Mollberg; Maria Nyström
Journal:  Int J Qual Stud Health Well-being       Date:  2010-10-22

9.  Pressure and judgement within a dichotomous landscape of infant feeding: a grounded theory study to explore why breastfeeding women do not access peer support provision.

Authors:  Louise Hunt; Gill Thomson
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2016-04-01       Impact factor: 3.092

10.  Who knows what: An exploration of the infant feeding message environment and intracultural differences in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

Authors:  Elizabeth L Fox; Gretel H Pelto; Kathleen M Rasmussen; Marie Guerda Debrosse; Vanessa A Rouzier; Jean William Pape; David L Pelletier
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2017-10-04       Impact factor: 3.092

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