Literature DB >> 381622

Infant care: cache or carry.

B Lozoff, G Brittenham.   

Abstract

To test the hypothesis that a characteristic infant-care pattern existed during most of human history, contemporary hunter-gatherers in a representative sample of world cultures were examined. Numerically coded measures of infant care revealed a uniform pattern. Mothers are the principal caregivers, providing extensive body contact day and night and prolonged breast-feeding. When not carried, the baby of hunter-gatherers has complete freedom of movement. Care is consistently affectionate, with immediate nurturant response to crying. Nonetheless, in most groups, children achieve early independence and by 2 to 4 years spend more than half the time away from the mother. In the United States this pattern of carrying that endured for one to three million years has been replaced by one resembling nesting or caching. Infants spend little time in body contact with caregivers and their movements are restricted by playpens, high chairs, or cribs. Of the minority who are breast-fed, half are weaned within a few weeks. Separate sleeping arrangements and delayed response to crying are regularly recommended. These remarkable transformations may profoundly alter infant development and maternal involvement.

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Mesh:

Year:  1979        PMID: 381622     DOI: 10.1016/s0022-3476(79)80540-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pediatr        ISSN: 0022-3476            Impact factor:   4.406


  9 in total

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3.  Parent-infant cosleeping: the appropriate context for the study of infant sleep and implications for sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS) research.

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4.  CULTURAL MODELS OF INFANT EMOTIONS AND NEEDS AMONG THE GAMO PEOPLE OF SOUTHERN ETHIOPIA.

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5.  The early crying paradox : A modest proposal.

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Review 6.  Experiences of women who underwent induced lactation: A literature review.

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Review 7.  Deformational plagiocephaly: The case for an evolutionary mismatch.

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8.  Postpartum Depression Without Antenatal Depression in Primiparous Women.

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9.  Mother⁻Infant Physical Contact Predicts Responsive Feeding among U.S. Breastfeeding Mothers.

Authors:  Emily E Little; Cristine H Legare; Leslie J Carver
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  9 in total

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