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Social influences upon breastfeeding Social influences upon breastfeeding

Social influences upon breastfeeding - PowerPoint Presentation

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Social influences upon breastfeeding - PPT Presentation

Dr Amy Brown Overview How others affect breastfeeding Grandmothers Fathers partners General public We are a product of those around us Attitudes Knowledge Persuasion Criticism Ability to help ID: 645449

public breastfeeding support mothers breastfeeding public mothers support feeding women baby feel believed milk survey didn

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Slide1

Social influences upon breastfeeding

Dr Amy BrownSlide2

Overview

How others affect breastfeedingGrandmothersFathers / partners

General public Slide3

We are a product of those around us

Attitudes

Knowledge

Persuasion

Criticism

Ability to help

Setting of normal behavior Slide4
Slide5
Slide6

She can’t be getting enough if she’s feeding again!

Have you tied just not feeding her?

Of course she’s going to keep waking at night if you offer it to her!

It’s because you insist on breastfeeding her STILL

ROD FOR YOUR OWN BACK!

Your milk must be skimmed!

Just ignore her, she can’t be hungry at nightSlide7

Knowledge

Attitudes

Confidence

Self efficacy

EmpowermentSlide8

Grandmothers

One of the biggest influences on whether a mother breastfeeds is whether she was herself breastfed

especially if she knows how long for Slide9

Grandmothers – when it goes right

Able to help

knowledge and experience

Provide positive environment

Mothers really value practical and emotional support - want to feel their decision is accepted and supported

Ekström

A, Widström AM, Nissen E. Breastfeeding support from partners and grandmothers: perceptions of Swedish women. Birth. 2003 Dec 1;30(4):261-6.Slide10

History of infant feeding

Infant formula milk first introduced at end of 19th century …

breastfeeding rates gradually dropped, especially with growth of advertising

In the UK

1975: 51% initiation (15% at 3 months)

1990: 62% initiation (30% at 3 months)2010: 81% initiation (40% at 3 months)Slide11

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0XsQel_c_0I

Slide12

Grandmothers – when it goes wrong

Unable to help or help in ‘wrong’ way

Difficult emotions

Deliberate sabotage

Grassley J,

Eschiti

V. Grandmother breastfeeding support: what do mothers need and want?. Birth. 2008 Dec 1;35(4):329-35

.Cultural traditionsKerr RB,

Dakishoni L, Shumba L, Msachi R, Chirwa

M. “We grandmothers know plenty”: breastfeeding, complementary feeding and the multifaceted role of grandmothers in Malawi. Social science & medicine. 2008 Mar 31;66(5):1095-105.

One intervention

to support younger mothers with

breastfeeding

only worked if the mother was living away from home

Bica

OC,

Giugliani

ER. Influence of counseling sessions on the prevalence of breastfeeding in the first year of life: a randomized clinical trial with adolescent mothers and grandmothers. Birth. 2014 Mar 1;41(1):39-45.Slide13

A Grandmother’s tea?

Aim: to (re) educate daughters and their mothers together

http

://www.illinoisbreastfeeding.org/21401/21464.

html

Increased knowledge but unfortunately not attitudes or breastfeeding rates

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3400246/ Slide14
Slide15

Fathers & partnersSlide16

Importance of support

A supportive partner is predictive of intention, initiation and duration Mothers whose partner supports them feel empowered, confident and competent

Fathers most likely to support if they grew up around breastfeeding

Tohotoa

J,

Maycock

B, Hauck YL,

Howat P, Burns S, Binns CW. Dads make a difference: an exploratory study of paternal support for breastfeeding in Perth, Western Australia. International breastfeeding journal. 2009 Nov 29;4(1):15.Slide17

Brown A, Davies R. Fathers' experiences of supporting breastfeeding: challenges for breastfeeding promotion and education. Maternal & child nutrition. 2014 Oct 1;10(4):510-26.

117 men Baby 0 – 2 yearsPartner had initiated

breastfeedingSlide18

‘I hadn’t thought about it much until she was pregnant but then reading about it I was very positive’

‘I really hoped ***** (name of partner) would breastfeed as I’d heard so much good stuff about it. Breast is best’

‘Let’s see…getting up in the night versus making supportive noises and going back to sleep? No competition!!’

‘Breastmilk is free … both my wallet and I wanted her to choose it!’Slide19

‘I’d heard from friends that their wives struggled and it hurt and was really difficult. I didn’t want her to do that’

I’d heard from friends that their wives struggled and it hurt and was really difficult. I didn’t want her to do that’

‘I didn’t see much difference between formula and breast milk. My friends had bottle- fed and they seemed fine. But she really wanted to and I’m glad she did’

I didn’t feel strongly either way. However my wife wanted to breastfeed and everyone else told her to so she did … I didn’t see how I could tell her what to do’Slide20

‘When I said to a nurse I felt helpless she said enjoy the break and laughed like it was nothing to do with me.’

I did worry about how much he felt and used to say to my wife, is he meant to be feeding again?

‘He kept crying. All he wanted was feeding. Not much I could do which made me feel rubbish.’

‘It is really hard to see someone you love struggling and not to be able to do anything’

‘At first I freaked out about her feeding in front of people. I couldn’t stop thinking that she had her breast out in front of my father or my friends and that they were getting an eyeful. Thankfully I grew up though and realized you couldn’t really see anything and it was better than the screaming!’

‘I was jealous at some points. He seemed to enjoy feeding. He either slept or cried the rest of the time but feeding was the happy bit. I couldn’t do that.’Slide21

Lack of information

‘I don’t recall breastfeeding ever being discussed in front of me’

‘There was a leaflet that the midwife gave my wife. There were some posters up too in the doctors.’

I went to all the antenatal classes with her, but when it came to the breastfeeding session, we were all sent down the pub, with a wink, for a male bonding session. I could really have done with staying.’Slide22

Or insulting information …

‘There was this poster up in the ward apparently trying to promote breastfeeding which told dads it was a good thing because they would get more sleep. It was awful – not all dads are lazy and uninvolved which is what I felt it was implying. I wanted to help.’

‘One midwife actually told me in front of my wife that breastfeeding was a good thing as it would make her breasts bigger. I’m not that shallow’Slide23

Health ProfessionalsSlide24

‘I asked for help picking him up and latching him on as I was still so sore and I swear she rolled her eyes at me. She handled me quite roughly, latching him on for me, said there you go and walked off. I felt such a nuisance

’Versus

‘I couldn’t have done it without my midwife. She sat with me and helped me work out just what wasn’t quite right. She didn’t stop trying until he latched on beautifully, all the while making me feel like she had nothing else to do, even though I knew she was so busy’Slide25

What do mums want from professionals?

 

Continuity of care

Time: ‘Touching base’ (Dykes, 2005)

Empathy, affirmation, reassurance

Information

To be seen as a real person

Not ‘just’ a motherTo have their own needs consideredGraffy J, Taylor J. What information, advice, and support do women want with breastfeeding?. Birth. 2005 Sep 1;32(3):179-86.Slide26

‘I simply couldn’t have done it without her. She was my absolute rock. I must have called her over 10, 20 times when I was in hospital and every time she took the time to sit with me and reassure me. One time there was a bit of a lull in activity and she just sat with me watching him feed, reassuring me and telling me what a brilliant job I was doing. We chatted about what I would do when I got home and she told me about a great peer support group and a community midwife who would be able to help me. She made sure I felt confident in what I was doing and we talked about my fears for a bit. She didn’t have to do that. She could have had a well deserved break but she chose to give me that time. I will be forever grateful.’Slide27

What support do midwives like to give?

Skilled companion

Or

Technical expert

Tend to have a preference

Burns E, Fenwick J, Sheehan A,

Schmied

V. Mining for liquid gold: midwifery language and practices associated with early breastfeeding support. Maternal & child nutrition. 2013 Jan 1;9(1):57-73.Slide28

Approaches that don’t work …

Insistence

Seeing the milk rather than the mother

Need to take into account circumstances

A higher

proportion of mothers

are more worried

about telling their health professional they are not BF than concerned about the health impact for their baby.Lee E. Health, morality, and infant feeding: British mothers’ experiences of formula milk use in the early weeks. Sociology of health & illness. 2007 Nov 1;29(7):1075-90.Slide29

‘Imagine a young man making his first attempt at sexual penetration. Ask him to set about the project in a special sex centre where there are ‘experts’ he has never met before, ready to supervise and tell him how it ought to be done. Presume that his partner is as inexperienced as himself, and that he is asked if he is going to ‘try and achieve an erection’.

When he starts, a busy ‘expert’, who may never have personally experienced sexual relations, starts telling him how to do it and inspects his body with a critical expression, prodding him and his partner in an insensitive manner. By the bed is an artificial penis, put there, as the young man is told, ‘just in case you can’t manage it; many men can’t make it. It’s not their fault, nature often fails’.

Everyone

knows how vulnerable the male penis is to psychological stress, and how sensitive sexual partners must be in order to nurture the psyche, as well as the body, of the male. Yet such sensitivity has been conspicuously absent from the experience of most women giving birth in hospital

Gabrielle Palmer, Politics of BreastfeedingSlide30

Barriers for midwives

Time StaffingPrioritiesResources

However

Lack of training

Some don’t believe

Disagree with ‘new’ research

See role to protect new mum

Don’t want to pressurize

Bottle as solution?Slide31

Midwives own experiences

'

One midwife actually told me that although she would never say it in front of anyone else that she didn’t believe in promoting breastfeeding and thought it made no difference but she had to tell new mothers about it

anway

. She told me her babies had been formula fed and they were fine so not to worry about it. I was about to stop breastfeeding anyway at this point but even I was open mouthed at that one!’

Whether a midwife has breastfed her baby, and her

experience,

can influence how she goes on to care for new mothers. Those who have never had a baby of their own can be the most

dogmaticThe most supportive midwives tend to be the ones who have had positive experiences of breastfeeding their own babies, or those

who have been affected by negative experiences and want to help other mothers. Slide32

Public attitudes

http://

www.cell.com

/trends/molecular-medicine/

pdf

/S1471-4914(14)00201-9.pdfSlide33

We think its best…

1% of participants in a UK survey believed formula milk was a better choice than breastfeeding

In

the USA, the annual Health Styles survey found that over 96% of respondents believed that breast milk was the perfect food for a

baby

A

global survey of mothers in nine countries including Europe, China and the USA found over 98% agreed that ‘breast is best’ Slide34

… but we don’t want to see it

A YouGov survey in the UK found that 34% of the public agreed

women

breastfeeding in public was embarrassing for others and should not be done.

USA

[57%

]

, Australia [30%] and France [44%]. In Australia 82% believed that formula feeding was more acceptable than breastfeeding in public.

In the UK more people believe it is acceptable for a woman to breastfeed in a toilet than it is in a restaurant or on public

transport.

Sweden = 4% !!Slide35

Can’t you feed him before you come out?

I’m not allowed to flash my penis in public!

You’re trying to get the attention of my husband!

You can feed in the toilet!

Exhibitionism!

I don’t urinate in public

I don’t want to see naked breasts when drinking my coffee!Slide36

A thought…

Why is it called breastfeeding in public? Why not simply a baby eating?

Why do we make it about the actions of women?

To allow us to criticise?Slide37
Slide38

Nigel Farage (MP)

‘I’m

not particularly bothered about it, but I know a lot of people do feel very uncomfortable, and look, this is just a matter of common sense, isn’t it? I think that, given that some people feel very embarrassed by it, it isn’t too difficult to breastfeed a baby in a way that’s not openly

ostentatious

i

t’s not an issue that I get terribly hung up about, but I know particularly people of the older generation feel awkward and embarrassed by it.”

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2014/dec/05/nigel-farage-ukip-claridges-breastfeeding-

mothers

Slide39

College students most critical

80% of college students in Canada believed breastfeeding was an intimate act that should be

private

In another study 65

% believed that breastfeeding in public was not acceptable.

91

% of

a US student sample believed that the US should promote a breastfeeding friendly culture whilst 78% believed breastfeeding should only take place in private. Spear HJ. College students’ experiences and attitudes regarding middle and high school–based breastfeeding education. The Journal of School Nursing. 2007 Oct;23(5):276-82.

Slide40

Women are more critical than men

In a global survey, agreement of

mothers

that

‘breastfeeding in public was perfectly natural’

63% UK

57

% US55% Brazil35% France 19%

Chinahttps://www.lansinoh.co.uk/blog/breastfeeding-survey-results-2015 Slide41

Sexualisation and sexism

In a US study, only 48% of men felt it was appropriate to show a woman breastfeeding on a magazine cover, 37% on a billboard or poster and 46% on a family television show.

The higher a man scores on traits of sexism, the less likely he is to support breastfeeding in public

Page 3 (UK) ‘An

institution that has been there for more than 40 years

Britain’s

most valued heritage … the freedom to choose’ Acker M. Breast is best… but not everywhere: ambivalent sexism and attitudes toward private and public breastfeeding. Sex roles. 2009 Oct 1;61(7-8):476-90.Slide42

42Slide43

43Slide44
Slide45

45Slide46
Slide47

Contamination?

In one survey of UK Sunday Times readers 65% believed it was acceptable to breastfeed her baby

by the side of

the pool … yet 64% believed it unacceptable to breastfeed whilst sat

in

the pool.

Concept of bodily fluids – often associated with illness (or even seen as sexual fluids)Squeamish about human milk but not cows milk?! Shildrick M. Leaky bodies and boundaries: Feminism, postmodernism and (bio) ethics.

Routledge; 2015 Dec 22.Slide48

Does this affect women?

In 2009 a survey of over 1200 mothers in the UK by Mother and Baby Magazine found that:

60

% of mothers felt that the UK was not breastfeeding

friendly

65

% found breastfeeding in public a stressful experience

54% had directly received negative comments or actions. Slide49

How women feel matters

Perceiving breastfeeding in public to be embarrassing or threatening predicts a lower intention and likelihood of breastfeeding

Fear it might happen

Feelings of disapproval

Worry about being confronted

Anxiety can make it more difficult

Ties in with body image issues

Trying to delay feeds impacts upon supplySlide50

How many do so?

Only 58% of mothers who breastfeed in the UK did so in public Only 36% of Italian women breastfeeding women do so in public

Only 8% of mothers in UK felt comfortable breastfeeding wherever they wanted.

In Sweden nearly 80% of mothers with a baby aged 6 weeks old had breastfed in a public place Slide51
Slide52

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LURZqBig734 Slide53

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-dw2XHMUnyE