In fact, it would seem as if the story of modern black
American women breastfeeding is limited.
Hear what BBIC Board Member, Kimberly Seals Allers (Editor - in - Chief of MochaManual.com) sees as barriers to young African
American women breastfeeding as a first choice.
Based on the findings, they estimated that about 720 infant deaths would be prevented annually if
all American women breastfed their babies for the first year.
In the 1980s, only about 50 % of
American women breastfed even once.
58.1 % of African -
American women breastfeed in the early postpartum period, compared to 77.7 % of White women and 80.6 % of Hispanic women.
While some 70 percent of
American women breastfeed initially, by six months the number is down to 33 percent, according to AAP research.
Not exact matches
Most
American mothers wean their babies well before a year; Some
women wean out of necessity, due to inability to
breastfeed or technical issues related to nursing; Some children wean themselves, which causes some mothers elation and others, absolute sorrow.
American women face a number of barriers in trying to
breastfeed, including little lactation education during pregnancy, few facilities for expressing milk when they return to the workplace and, in many cases, lack of support from family members and friends.
Event is a prenatal birthing /
breastfeeding class, childcare for
women attending, and mother - led
breastfeeding support group, along with access to African -
American CLCs and IBCLCs.
U.S. Surgeon General David Satcher was in Chicago last month decrying the disturbingly low rate of
breastfeeding by
American women and the disparity in
breastfeeding rates between white and African -
American women.
Twenty percent of the
women who had lactation consultants only were frequently
breastfeeding at three months, compared to 17 percent of those who got the consultant and electronic prompts and only 8 percent in the comparison group, Bonuck's team reports in the
American Journal of Public Health.
Since it has taken some time, and a ton of coaxing and money from big businesses (ie - formula manufacturers) to convince the majority of
American women NOT to
breastfeed, I have no problem with an «in your face» advocacy that is attempting to put
breastfeeding back where it belongs, at the TOP of the list, as a first and most important choice.
Research to be presented at The
American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session this month (March, 2018) shows
women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who
breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to
women who never
breastfed.
By encouraging
breastfeeding, the
American Cancer Society would recognize its cancer prevention possibilities, cooperate with the Surgeon General «s directive and empower
women to dramatically affect their baby «s health while satisfying the deep emotional urgings to care for their young through
breastfeeding.
American women have fought long and hard for
breastfeeding rights.
Did you know that, in the United States, 75 % of all mothers attempt to
breastfeed, but a meager 15 % of
American women successfully
breastfeed?
Most
American breastfeeding women beginning solids at 6 months experience 6 - 12 months of amenorrhea (lack of periods), but much longer is not at all uncommon, even today.
Loveless, also a
breastfeeding support technician at the largest maternity hospital in Cincinnati, says that African
American women lost
breastfeeding generations ago.
Obama's obesity initiative comes at a time when
breastfeeding advocates are intensifying their efforts to understand why African
American women have the lowest
breastfeeding rates in the country.
The
American Academy of Pediatrics has been urging mothers to
breastfeed their baby for a minimum of 6 months, but there has been a lot of press recently with
woman complaining that 6 months is way too difficult.
However, 40 percent of Hispanic mothers and 35 percent of white mothers
breastfeed exclusively for the government - recommended six months, compared to 20 percent of African
American women, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or the CDC, reported in 2008.
Studies show
breastfeeding lowers the risk of obesity, cancer, and chronic diseases — many of which disproportionately impact African
American women — in mothers, as well as helps protect children against a host of ailments, including respiratory infections, asthma and childhood leukemia.
«We have a dynamic role model in the White House, a black
woman who gets the idea that she can go to work, be a lawyer and still provide milk for her baby,» said Napiera Loveless, co-founder of MamaTotoMatema, a Cincinnati - based organization committed to educating and encouraging leaders and health care professionals to adopt different approaches to promoting
breastfeeding in African
American families.
The
women they show in the rest of the magazine are all mainstream, typical
American women — moms — who choose to
breastfeed.
The
American Academy of Pediatrics recommends that mothers
breastfeed for at least a year — and encourages
women to
breastfeed even longer if both you and your baby want to.
But, even so, 74 % of
American women triumph over these issues and leave the hospital having established
breastfeeding with their newborn.
Although 75 % of new mothers intend to
breastfeed, not all
women are able to
breastfeed their infants exclusively for the first 6 months of life, as recommended by the
American Academy of Pediatrics and the World Health Organization;
While there is anecdotal evidence that the drugs appear to help some
women make more milk, a 2011 report released by the
American Academy of
Breastfeeding Medicine found no conclusive evidence of «correlation between baseline prolactin levels and rates or milk synthesis or measured volumes of milk production.»
And while I know that over half of
Americans are disgusted by the sight of a
woman breastfeeding, I would think that a pediatrician's office isn't one of those places where she would be met with that kind of attitude.
[3][174] In the United States African -
American women have persistently low rates of
breastfeeding compared to White and Hispanic
American women.
Dr. Kendall - Tackett is author of more than 310 journal articles, book chapters and other publications, and author or editor of 22 books in the fields of trauma,
women's health, depression, and
breastfeeding, including Treating the Lifetime Health Effects of Childhood Victimization, 2nd Edition (in press, Civic Research Institute), Depression in New Mothers, 2nd Edition (2010, Routledge), The Psychoneuroimmunology of Chronic Disease (2010, American Psychological Association), and Breastfeeding Made Simple, 2nd Edition (co-authored with Nancy Mohrb
breastfeeding, including Treating the Lifetime Health Effects of Childhood Victimization, 2nd Edition (in press, Civic Research Institute), Depression in New Mothers, 2nd Edition (2010, Routledge), The Psychoneuroimmunology of Chronic Disease (2010,
American Psychological Association), and
Breastfeeding Made Simple, 2nd Edition (co-authored with Nancy Mohrb
Breastfeeding Made Simple, 2nd Edition (co-authored with Nancy Mohrbacher, 2010).
The World Health Organization strongly advocates that all
women worldwide
breastfeed their babies at least until 2 years old, and the
American Academy of Pediatrics advocates 1 year or more, and nursing for comfort is an essential part of this.
Although the
American Academy of Pediatrics, the Food and Drug Administration, and the drug manufacturer have raised concern about the use of fluoxetine by
women while
breastfeeding and the drug manufacturer recommends against its use, these guidelines are based on little information.1, 2
In 2009, The
American Institute for Cancer Research (a member of the International Agency for Research on Cancer, a part of the World Health Organization) released the largest review of research into lifestyle and breast cancer ever conducted, which reinforced previous findings that
women can reduce their risk by maintaining a healthy weight, being physically active, drinking less alcohol, and
breastfeeding their children.
This particular meta - study reported that
breastfeeding provides up to a 28 % decrease in risk of developing breast cancer at any age (pre - or post-menopausal) for
women without a family history of the disease, who
breastfed for 12 months or longer (World Cancer Research Fund and
American Institute for Cancer Research, 2007).
It's hard for parents today to appreciate what it was like for
American women who wanted to
breastfeed in the 1940s and «50s.
Take away infant formula and the millions of
women who fuel our economy would no longer be able to work, because
American employers are certainly not going to pay them to stay home and
breastfeed.
Women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to women who never breastfed, based on research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Ses
Women with normal blood pressure during pregnancy and who
breastfed their babies for at least six months following birth had better markers of cardiovascular health years later compared to
women who never breastfed, based on research presented at the American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Ses
women who never
breastfed, based on research presented at the
American College of Cardiology's 67th Annual Scientific Session.
Most
American women do not
breastfeed exclusively for more than a month or two, and most stop before their babies are 6 months old.
The
American Academy of Pediatrics suggests that
women breastfeed until a year or longer, but despite what anyone can tell you, it is important that you choose a timing that feels the most natural.
According to 2008 CDC data,
breastfeeding initiation rates are much higher in higher - income, largely white communitiesThey are significantly lower for African -
American mothers, as well as Hispanic and Native
American women.
In fact, according to a study in
Breastfeeding Medicine, mothers with lower rates of breastfeeding «tend to be young, low - income, African American, unmarried, less educated, participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), overweight or obese before pregnancy, and more likely to report their pregnancy was unint
Breastfeeding Medicine, mothers with lower rates of
breastfeeding «tend to be young, low - income, African American, unmarried, less educated, participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), overweight or obese before pregnancy, and more likely to report their pregnancy was unint
breastfeeding «tend to be young, low - income, African
American, unmarried, less educated, participants in the Supplemental Nutrition Program for
Women, Infants, and Children (WIC), overweight or obese before pregnancy, and more likely to report their pregnancy was unintended.»
Eligible
women had an otherwise healthy premature infant (no congenital anomalies and no life - threatening condition in the immediate postpartum period) between 26 and 37 weeks» gestational age in the NICU; spoke English or Spanish; were eligible to
breastfeed according to the 1997 guidelines from the
American Academy of Pediatrics21; and chose to do so.
Because race is a factor in
breastfeeding duration among term infants (39 % of white US infants are
breastfeeding at 6 months compared with 24 % of African
American infants3) and because of the high incidence of premature births among African
American women, we performed a subgroup analysis on African
American subjects.
WIC - based interventions to promote
breastfeeding among African -
American Women in Baltimore: effects on
breastfeeding initiation and continuation
Breastfeeding ambivalence among low - income African
American and Puerto Rican
women in north and central Brooklyn
Hispanic and Asian
women are currently meeting the Healthy People 2020 (HP2020) 4
breastfeeding initiation goal of 81.9 %, whereas Native
American and white
women are close to attaining the goal.
Attitudes and power structures that permit male dominance over
women's breasts, has reached such excess in North
American society that
breastfeeding can be considered «obscene», spawning US state legislation that expressly excludes
breastfeeding women from obscenity laws.
Breastfeeding advice given to African
American and white
women by physicians and WIC counselors
The rates of any
breastfeeding at 6 and 12 mo among Hispanic, Native
American, and white
women are quite similar, but still require substantial improvement to meet the HP2020 goals of 61 % at 6 mo, and 34 % at 12 mo..