This article, which is part of a larger historical study of infant-feeding advice received by mothers in Queensland, Australia, identifies and examines print materials that were used by mothers, or that influenced other texts, during the postwar period from 1945 to 1965. The texts are described within the context of their environmental influences and the medical knowledge and research of the time to assess what effect, if any, these latter materials had on the established system of infant-feeding advice. Two innovations that were employed are the use of interviews to identify the most-used texts and the comparison of popular advice books with medical journal material
© 2016 Australian College of Midwives Background Breastfeeding has many known benefits yet its suppo...
Although the advertising of infant and follow-on formula products in Australia is prohibited by the ...
Although the advertising of infant and follow-on formula products in Australia is prohibited by the ...
The aim of this article, part of a larger study (Thorley 2000), was to determine and examine the pra...
© Nursing Mothers' Association of AustraliaThe mass print media provide an opportunity to promote he...
In 1974 the Department of Health and Social Security alerted the medical profession and the general ...
In 1974 the Department of Health and Social Security alerted the medical profession and the general ...
This paper provides a literature review of the use of donor human milk by hospitals in Australia and...
Infant feeding practices were retrospectively ascertained in a random cohort of parous women (mean a...
This paper uses detailed records relating to feeding and health for a large sample of infants born i...
Traditionally historical studies of Australian maternity in the early twentieth-century have relied ...
The Nursing Mothers’ Association, founded in 1964, changed its name to the Nursing Mothers’ Associat...
Background: Low breastfeeding duration rates reflect the pain and distress experienced by many women...
Background: Low breastfeeding duration rates reflect the pain and distress experienced by many women...
This paper will give a historical account of breastfeeding and explain the socio-cultural context in...
© 2016 Australian College of Midwives Background Breastfeeding has many known benefits yet its suppo...
Although the advertising of infant and follow-on formula products in Australia is prohibited by the ...
Although the advertising of infant and follow-on formula products in Australia is prohibited by the ...
The aim of this article, part of a larger study (Thorley 2000), was to determine and examine the pra...
© Nursing Mothers' Association of AustraliaThe mass print media provide an opportunity to promote he...
In 1974 the Department of Health and Social Security alerted the medical profession and the general ...
In 1974 the Department of Health and Social Security alerted the medical profession and the general ...
This paper provides a literature review of the use of donor human milk by hospitals in Australia and...
Infant feeding practices were retrospectively ascertained in a random cohort of parous women (mean a...
This paper uses detailed records relating to feeding and health for a large sample of infants born i...
Traditionally historical studies of Australian maternity in the early twentieth-century have relied ...
The Nursing Mothers’ Association, founded in 1964, changed its name to the Nursing Mothers’ Associat...
Background: Low breastfeeding duration rates reflect the pain and distress experienced by many women...
Background: Low breastfeeding duration rates reflect the pain and distress experienced by many women...
This paper will give a historical account of breastfeeding and explain the socio-cultural context in...
© 2016 Australian College of Midwives Background Breastfeeding has many known benefits yet its suppo...
Although the advertising of infant and follow-on formula products in Australia is prohibited by the ...
Although the advertising of infant and follow-on formula products in Australia is prohibited by the ...