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“…[T]his is What We are Missing”: The Value of Communicating Infant Feeding Information Across Three Generations of African American Women

Alexis L. Woods Barr, Deborah Austin, Jacquana L. Smith, Ellen J. Schafer

2021Journal of Human Lactation12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Breast/Chestfeeding remains a public health issue for African Americans, and increased rates would mitigate many health disparities, thus promoting health equity. RESEARCH AIMS: To explore the interplay of generational familial roles and meaning (or value) ascribed to communicating infant feeding information across three generations. METHOD: = 35; 15 family triads/dyads), residing in the southeastern United States were interviewed. Data were analyzed using thematic analysis. RESULTS: The older two generations described their role using assertive yet nurturing terms, while the younger generation carefully discussed the flexibility between their familial roles. Emergent themes described the meaning each generation attributed to communicating infant feeding information: "My Responsibility," "Comforting," "Bonding Experience," "She Cared," and "Gained Wisdom." CONCLUSIONS: Our findings have potential to contribute to achieving health equity in African American families. Future breast/chestfeeding promotion efforts may benefit from reframing the current approach to including protection language and not solely support language. Lactation professionals should further recognize and support strengths and resource-richness of intergenerational infant feeding communication within African American families using strength-based, empowerment-oriented, and ethnically sensitive approaches.

Topics & Concepts

Thematic analysisHealth equityEmpowermentPsychologyDevelopmental psychologySocial psychologyGender studiesQualitative researchSociologyPublic healthMedicineEconomic growthNursingSocial scienceEconomicsBreastfeeding Practices and InfluencesNeuroscience of respiration and sleepInfant Development and Preterm Care
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