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Infant Feeding Practices: A Cross-Cultural Perspective

✍ Scribed by Pranee Liamputtong (auth.), Pranee Liamputtong (eds.)


Publisher
Springer-Verlag New York
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Leaves
387
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Infant Feeding Practices A Cross-Cultural Perspective Pranee Liamputtong, Editor It’s natural... It’s unsightly... It’s normal... It’s dangerous. To breastfeed or not? For millions of women around the world, this personal decision is influenced by numerous social, cultural, and health factors. Infant Feeding Practices is the first book to delve into these factors from a global perspective, revealing striking similarities and differences from country to country. Dispatches from Asia, Australia, Africa, the U.K., and the U.S. explore as wide a gamut of salient issues affecting feeding practices as traditional beliefs about colostrums, β€œbreast is best” campaigns, partner attitudes, workplace culture, direct government intervention, and the pressure to be a β€œgood mother.” Throughout these informative pages, women are seen balancing innovation and tradition to nurture healthy, thriving babies. A sampling of topics covered: β€’ Policy versus practice in infant feeding. β€’ Infant feeding in the age of AIDS. β€’ Managing the lactating body: the view from the U.S. β€’ Motherhood, work, and feeding. β€’ The effects of migration on infant feeding. β€’ From breastfeeding tradition to optimal breastfeeding practice. Infant Feeding Practices is a first-of-its-kind resource for researchers and practioners in maternal and child health, public health, global health, and cultural anthropology seeking empirical findings and culturally diverse information on this sensitive issue.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xxxv
Front Matter....Pages 21-21
Infant Feeding Beliefs and Practices Across Cultures: An Introduction....Pages 1-20
Front Matter....Pages 21-21
Managing the Lactating Body: The Breastfeeding Project in the Age of Anxiety....Pages 23-38
Attitudes to Breastfeeding....Pages 39-54
The Imperative to Breastfeed: An Australian Perspective....Pages 55-76
Infant Feeding and the Problems of Policy....Pages 77-91
Front Matter....Pages 93-93
Shifting Identities: Social and Cultural Factors That Shape Decision-Making Around Sustaining Breastfeeding....Pages 95-108
Breastfeeding Under the Blanket: Exploring the Tensions Between Health and Social Attitudes to Breastfeeding in the United States, Ireland and the United Kingdom....Pages 109-123
Breastfeeding Beliefs and Practices Among Employed Women: A Thai Cultural Perspective....Pages 125-140
Good Mothers and Infant Feeding Practices Amongst Women in Northern Thailand....Pages 141-159
Front Matter....Pages 161-161
Breastfeeding in Sub-Saharan Africa: Still the Best Despite the Risk of HIV....Pages 163-174
Infant Feeding in the Era of HIV: Challenges and Opportunities....Pages 175-193
Facing Competing Cultures of Breastfeeding: The Experience of HIV-Positive Women in Burkina Faso....Pages 195-209
Fluid Boundaries: Multiple Meanings of the Illness β€˜ Moto ’ in Northern Malawi....Pages 211-227
Front Matter....Pages 229-229
From Traditional to Optimal Breastfeeding Practices: Selected Cases from Central and Southern Africa....Pages 231-246
Hoki Ki Te Ukaipo: Reinstating Māori Infant Care Practices to Increase Breastfeeding Rates....Pages 247-263
Infant Feeding in Indigenous Australian Communities....Pages 265-276
Breastfeeding, Vertical Disease Transmission and the Volition of Medicines in Malawi....Pages 277-287
Infant Feeding Beliefs and Practices in Islamic Societies: Focusing on Rural Turkey....Pages 289-301
Early Initiation of Breastfeeding and Its Beneficial Effects in Japan....Pages 303-313
Socio-cultural Factors Influencing Infant Feeding Patterns Within 6 Months Postpartum in Rural Vietnam....Pages 315-335
Front Matter....Pages 229-229
Infant Feeding Following Migration: Attitudes and Practices of Women Born in Turkey and Vietnam After Migration to Australia....Pages 337-355
Back Matter....Pages 357-372

✦ Subjects


Maternal and Child Health; Public Health; Anthropology


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