It Takes a Village: How Community-Based Peer Support for Breastfeeding Bolsters Lactation Prevalence Among Black Mississippians on the Gulf Coast.

IF 1.4 Q3 PEDIATRICS Pediatric Reports Pub Date : 2024-11-23 DOI:10.3390/pediatric16040091
John P Bartkowski, Katherine Klee, Xiaohe Xu, Jacinda B Roach, Shakeizia Kezi Jones
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Abstract

Background/objectives: Breastfeeding rates are considerably lower among African American women and across the U.S. South. Our study introduces the concept of community-based peer support for breastfeeding, as measured through beliefs about women's comfort breastfeeding in various social situations (i.e., in the presence of women and men as well as close friends and strangers).

Methods: We examine if community-based peer support for breastfeeding is associated with reported lactation prevalence in primary social networks among survey respondents living on the Mississippi Gulf Coast. Special attention is paid to racial differences in the breastfeeding support-prevalence relationship. We use data drawn from a survey that combines a random sample of adults who are representative of the Mississippi Gulf Coast population and a non-random oversample of African Americans in this predominantly rural tri-county area.

Results: Analyses of data from wave 1 of the CDC-funded 2019 Mississippi REACH Social Climate Survey reveal low overall levels of African American breastfeeding network prevalence (knowing friends and family who have breastfed). However, community-based peer support for breastfeeding significantly amplifies breastfeeding network prevalence for black Mississippians when compared with their white counterparts.

Discussion: Previous research has indicated that breastfeeding promotional messages have a limited impact on African American breastfeeding propensity along the Mississippi Gulf Coast. However, the current study indicates that enhanced community-based peer support for breastfeeding can be a key facilitator for improved lactation outcomes among African Americans as compared with whites.

Conclusion: We establish that breastfeeding is best conceived as both an interpersonal encounter (an activity often conducted in the presence of others) and a collective achievement (a practice influenced by community norms). We discuss study implications and directions for future research.

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需要一个村庄:基于社区的母乳喂养同伴支持如何提高墨西哥湾沿岸密西西比黑人的母乳喂养率。
背景/目标:非裔美国妇女和美国南部地区的母乳喂养率要低得多。我们的研究引入了社区同伴对母乳喂养的支持这一概念,通过对女性在各种社交场合(即在女性和男性以及密友和陌生人面前)进行母乳喂养是否舒适的信念来衡量:我们研究了社区对母乳喂养的同伴支持是否与居住在密西西比海湾地区的调查对象在主要社交网络中报告的哺乳率有关。我们还特别关注了母乳喂养支持与母乳喂养率关系中的种族差异。我们使用的数据来自一项调查,该调查将密西西比海湾沿岸人口中具有代表性的成年人随机抽样与这个以农村为主的三郡地区非裔美国人的非随机超抽样相结合:对疾病预防控制中心资助的 2019 年密西西比 REACH 社会环境调查第 1 次调查的数据进行分析后发现,非裔美国人母乳喂养网络普及率(认识母乳喂养过的朋友和家人)总体水平较低。然而,与白人相比,密西西比黑人的母乳喂养网络普及率在社区同龄人的支持下大幅提高:以往的研究表明,母乳喂养宣传信息对密西西比海湾沿岸非裔美国人母乳喂养倾向的影响有限。然而,目前的研究表明,与白人相比,加强社区对母乳喂养的同伴支持是改善非裔美国人哺乳效果的关键因素:我们认为,母乳喂养既是一种人际交往(一种经常在他人在场的情况下进行的活动),也是一种集体成就(一种受社区规范影响的做法)。我们讨论了研究的意义和未来研究的方向。
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来源期刊
Pediatric Reports
Pediatric Reports PEDIATRICS-
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
55
审稿时长
11 weeks
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