Literature DB >> 2680902

Risk in mother-infant separation postbirth.

G C Anderson.   

Abstract

The United States ranks poorly worldwide on infant mortality and breastfeeding, and recent trends are discouraging. The continuous rooming-in method of care is the general rule in European countries, which have low infant mortality and high breastfeeding rates; but this is a method of care (or an option) that the poor, and even some affluent, do not have available to them, or do not know how to go about obtaining, in the United States. The mother and infant are considered mutual caregivers, whose self-regulatory interaction postbirth is mutually beneficial, conducive to breastfeeding and cost effective. Newborn infants deprived of self-regulatory (on cue) access to their mothers are considered at increased physiological and developmental risk. Continuous rooming-in is recommended for study in a multisite, controlled clinical trial and then, if findings warrant, for implementation nationwide.

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Mesh:

Year:  1989        PMID: 2680902     DOI: 10.1111/j.1547-5069.1989.tb00142.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Image J Nurs Sch        ISSN: 0743-5150


  4 in total

Review 1.  Early skin-to-skin contact for mothers and their healthy newborn infants.

Authors:  Elizabeth R Moore; Gene C Anderson; Nils Bergman; Therese Dowswell
Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev       Date:  2012-05-16

2.  Crying babies, tired mothers - challenges of the postnatal hospital stay: an interpretive phenomenological study.

Authors:  Elisabeth Kurth; Elisabeth Spichiger; Elisabeth Zemp Stutz; Johanna Biedermann; Irene Hösli; Holly P Kennedy
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2010-05-13       Impact factor: 3.007

3.  Effect of early skin-to-skin contact on mother-preterm infant interaction through 18 months: randomized controlled trial.

Authors:  Sheau-Huey Chiu; Gene Cranston Anderson
Journal:  Int J Nurs Stud       Date:  2009-04-10       Impact factor: 5.837

4.  Mental health, attachment and breastfeeding: implications for adopted children and their mothers.

Authors:  Karleen D Gribble
Journal:  Int Breastfeed J       Date:  2006-03-09       Impact factor: 3.461

  4 in total

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