Literature DB >> 19827922

Inadequate: a metaphor for the lives of low-income women?

Nancy P Chin1, Anna Solomonik.   

Abstract

Exclusive breastfeeding of infants for the first 6 months of life with continued breastfeeding for at least 6 more months occurs only 11.9% of the time in the United States. Efforts of the past 30 years to promote optimal breastfeeding practices have had little impact. In order to create significant change in the way we feed infants in this country, we need to change the way we look at this public health issue and examine the cultural logic that makes bottle feeding the preferred choice of most U.S. women. This article analyzes the term "inadequate" not just as self-description of a woman's milk supply, but also as a metaphor for the lives of low-income women in the United States, the group least likely to breastfeed. Low-income women in the United States not only have inadequate incomes as compared to the general population, but inadequate child care, education, preventive health services, inadequate lifespans, and lives saturated with violence, leaving them inadequately safe even in their own homes. Here we outline a research agenda to explore the relationship between socially determined inadequacies and the cultural logic that makes bottle feeding a preferred form of infant feeding.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19827922      PMCID: PMC2763322          DOI: 10.1089/bfm.2009.0035

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Breastfeed Med        ISSN: 1556-8253            Impact factor:   1.817


  4 in total

1.  Western medicine and marketing: construction of an inadequate milk syndrome in lactating women.

Authors:  Fiona Dykes
Journal:  Health Care Women Int       Date:  2002 Jul-Aug

2.  Abuse, HIV status and health-related quality of life among a sample of HIV positive and HIV negative low income women.

Authors:  Karen A McDonnell; Andrea C Gielen; Patricia O'Campo; Jessica G Burke
Journal:  Qual Life Res       Date:  2005-05       Impact factor: 4.147

Review 3.  Insufficient milk supply.

Authors:  P D Hill; S S Humenick
Journal:  Image J Nurs Sch       Date:  1989

4.  Why mothers stop breastfeeding: mothers' self-reported reasons for stopping during the first year.

Authors:  Ruowei Li; Sara B Fein; Jian Chen; Laurence M Grummer-Strawn
Journal:  Pediatrics       Date:  2008-10       Impact factor: 7.124

  4 in total
  4 in total

1.  Breastfeeding and maternal employment: results from three national nutritional surveys in Mexico.

Authors:  Marta Rivera-Pasquel; Leticia Escobar-Zaragoza; Teresita González de Cosío
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2015-05

2.  Community violence and urban childhood asthma: a multilevel analysis.

Authors:  M J Sternthal; H-J Jun; F Earls; R J Wright
Journal:  Eur Respir J       Date:  2010-04-22       Impact factor: 16.671

3.  Determinants of perceived insufficient milk among new mothers in León, Nicaragua.

Authors:  Cara Safon; Danya Keene; William J Ugarte Guevara; Sara Kiani; Darby Herkert; Erick Esquivel Muñoz; Rafael Pérez-Escamilla
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2016-09-20       Impact factor: 3.092

4.  Engaging field-based professionals in a qualitative assessment of barriers and positive contributors to breastfeeding using the social ecological model.

Authors:  Rebecca L Dunn; Karrie A Kalich; Margaret J Henning; Rudolph Fedrizzi
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2015-01
  4 in total

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