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Total 20367 results found since Jan 2013.

Attitudes toward parental leave and breastfeeding during ophthalmology residency
CONCLUSION: A national discussion on standardizing parental leave and breastfeeding policies over all ophthalmology residency programs is warranted.PMID:33789088 | DOI:10.1016/j.jcjo.2021.02.039
Source: Canadian Journal of Ophthalmology - March 31, 2021 Category: Opthalmology Authors: Grace Reilly Caroline Tipton Paulina Liberman Meghan Berkenstock Source Type: research

Breast for Success: A Community-Academic Collaboration to Increase Breastfeeding Among High-Risk Mothers in Cleveland.
CONCLUSIONS: Through community-academic partnership, we identified intervention components that significantly increased the odds of breastfeeding in this high-risk population and can inform future collaborations. PMID: 28230542 [PubMed - in process]
Source: Progress in Community Health Partnerships - February 24, 2017 Category: Global & Universal Tags: Prog Community Health Partnersh Source Type: research

Breastfeeding Education in Family Medicine Residencies: A 2019 CERA Program Directors Survey.
CONCLUSIONS: This study defines associations with curricular targets for improved breastfeeding counseling competence among family medicine residents. Inclusion of lactation consultants, regular faculty observation of counseling skills, and group prenatal care may be gradually introduced in programs to strengthen resident education and skills in breastfeeding counseling. The body of evidence in this field remains lacking, and further research is needed to characterize curricular interventions that increase resident competence in this important skill. PMID: 32640472 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Famly Medicine - May 31, 2020 Category: Primary Care Authors: Uzumcu Z, Sutter MB, Cronholm PF Tags: Fam Med Source Type: research

Validation of Gender Friendly Breastfeeding Knowledge scale among young adults
Conclusion: Gender-friendly breastfeeding knowledge scale is a valid and reliable tool, it is recommended that this scale be used in communities, educational institutions, and in relevant research to assess breastfeeding knowledge among young adults of both genders, thereby promoting breastfeeding practices in the future.
Source: Journal of Preventive Medicine and Hygiene - January 4, 2022 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: ARTI GUPTA, Rajeev Aravindakshan, Sathiyanarayanan S, NAVYA KRISHNA NAIDU, Komakula N K S Santhoshi, RAKESH KAKKAR Source Type: research

Sofia Quintero Romero: Protection and Support of Breastfeeding With a Feminist and Social Justice Lens
J Hum Lact. 2023 Aug 30:8903344231193723. doi: 10.1177/08903344231193723. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTSofia Quintero Romero graduated as a medical doctor at Universidad del Rosario, Bogotà, Colombia, in 1977. She spent a compulsory rural year working in a remote indigenous community in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta in Columbia. In 1979 she worked in Bolivia for Terre des Hommes and Oxfam, evaluating their health projects with the Aymara Indians and in the tin mines. She had to leave Colombia for political reasons and went to England, where she obtained, in 1981, an MSc in Community Health at the London School of Hygi...
Source: Rural Remote Health - August 31, 2023 Category: Rural Health Authors: Sofia Quintero Romero Maryse Arendt Source Type: research

Predictors of exclusive breastfeeding: observations from the Alberta pregnancy outcomes and nutrition (APrON) study
This study assessed infant feeding transitions during the first 6 months postpartum and factors that predicted exclusive breastfeeding to 3 and 6 months. Methods: This prospective cohort study was part of the Alberta Pregnancy Outcomes and Nutrition study (APrON). From an initial sample of 600 pregnant women recruited from Edmonton and Calgary, 402 mothers provided complete details at 3 months postpartum; 300 stayed on to provide information at 6 months postpartum. During pregnancy and at 3 and 6 months postpartum, data on maternal and infant socio-demographic, behavior, and feeding were collected. Results: Even though the...
Source: BMC Pediatrics - Latest articles - May 16, 2013 Category: Pediatrics Authors: Mahsa JessriAnna FarmerKaterina MaximovaNoreen WillowsRhonda Bell Source Type: research

Increasing student nurses' knowledge of breastfeeding in baccalaureate education
Abstract: Nurses are the largest group of health care professionals capable of providing crucial support to new parents (). However, studies show that nurses' knowledge of breastfeeding is inadequate and most nursing programs do not include breastfeeding in their curriculum. Therefore nursing graduates enter the field of maternal child care with little or no ability to assist new mothers. A pilot program was implemented at a major university to evaluate the effect of adding specific breastfeeding content to the nursing curriculum. A pre–post-test method was used to evaluate nursing students who were provided a comprehens...
Source: Nurse Education in Practice - October 4, 2012 Category: Nursing Authors: Maryann Bozzette, Tricia Posner Tags: Midwifery Education in Practice Source Type: research

Characteristics Associated with Breastfeeding Behaviors Among Urban Versus Rural Women Enrolled in the Kansas WIC Program
This study provides insight into maternal characteristics associated with breastfeeding among urban versus rural women. A secondary analysis was conducted using the Pregnancy Nutrition Surveillance System dataset of women enrolled in the Kansas WIC program in 2011. Geographic residency status was obtained through application of the Census tract-based rural–urban commuting area codes. Descriptive variables included maternal demographics, health, and lifestyle behaviors. A multivariable binary logistic regression was used to obtain adjusted odds ratios with 95 % confidence intervals. The outcome variable was initiation of...
Source: Maternal and Child Health Journal - March 10, 2015 Category: Health Management Source Type: research

Moving National Breastfeeding Policies into Practice: A Plea to Integrate Lactation Education and Training into Nutrition and Dietetics Programs in the United States
In 2011, the Surgeon General’s Call to Action to Support Breastfeeding called on all health professional organizations, medical schools, and credentialing boards to establish and incorporate minimum lactation education and training requirements into their credentialing, licensing, and certification processes and to include breastfeeding education in undergraduate and graduate education and training programs. Given the commonalities between the fields of nutrition and breastfeeding, it has been proposed that nutrition professionals are an underutilized resource in the field of lactation management. Considering the lac...
Source: Journal of Human Lactation - July 6, 2016 Category: Nursing Authors: Theurich, M. A., McCool, M. E. Tags: Insights in Policy Source Type: research

Breastfeeding Support Reported by FutureRegistered Dietitian Nutritionists Following Advanced Breastfeeding Education
Evaluate the effectiveness of an advanced breastfeeding and lactation management education integrated into graduate-level dietetic internships to promote future Registered Dietitian Nutritionists (RDNs) breastfeeding support.
Source: Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior - July 1, 2023 Category: Nutrition Authors: Crystal Douglas, Simone Camel Source Type: research

Social interaction matters to job search over the long haul
Discussion focuses on implications for theory and practice and the role of co-rumination for unemployed people during job search.PMID:36684465 | PMC:PMC9838532 | DOI:10.1007/s12144-022-04123-6
Source: Current Psychology - January 23, 2023 Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Authors: Aristides I Ferreira Rosa Rodrigues Helena Carvalho Donald Truxillo Source Type: research