Background: Most mothers in the United States express their milk, which is then bottle fed to their infants. The National Immunization Survey (NIS), used to report national breastfeeding prevalence, asks about infant breast milk consumption, regardless of whether it is consumed at the mother\u27s breast or from a bottle. The NIS data are often erroneously interpreted, however, to mean prevalence of at-the-breast feeding. We hypothesized that over half of infants classified as breastfed at 3, 6, and 12 months by the NIS questions would also be consuming expressed breast milk. Materials and Methods: A convenience sample of 456 mothers of infants 19?35 months of age recruited through ResearchMatch.org completed an online infant-feeding questio...
Breastfeeding rates are low in the UK, where approximately one quarter of infants receive a breastmi...
Background:Objectives of current study were to know the prevailing infant feeding practices in infan...
Most U.S. mothers who feed their human milk (HM) to their infants now use pumps and bottles or cups ...
Questions concerning the advantages of breast-feeding have been debated since the introduction of co...
Background: Preterm infants start milk feeds by gavage tube. As they mature, sucking feeds are gradu...
Breastfeeding and formula feeding are two ways to feed an infant after it is born. The importance of...
This research study examines the relationship between breastfeeding patterns and age of entry into c...
Background: Breastfeeding assessment in the hospital to determine adequacy of feeds remains controve...
Objective: To explore longitudinal associations between bottle-feeding and maternal encouragement of...
This study tested the milk flow rates and variability in flow of currently available nipples used fo...
To investigate the prevalence and predictors of expressed breast-milk feeding in healthy full-term i...
Abstract: Several key studies highlight the importance of breastfeeding and there is a broad consens...
Objective: This study aims to understand how women interpret infant formula advertising to aid under...
The complexity of human milk-feeding behaviours may not be captured using simpler definitions of “ex...
It is hypothesized that the visual and weight cues afforded by bottle-feeding may lead mothers to ov...
Breastfeeding rates are low in the UK, where approximately one quarter of infants receive a breastmi...
Background:Objectives of current study were to know the prevailing infant feeding practices in infan...
Most U.S. mothers who feed their human milk (HM) to their infants now use pumps and bottles or cups ...
Questions concerning the advantages of breast-feeding have been debated since the introduction of co...
Background: Preterm infants start milk feeds by gavage tube. As they mature, sucking feeds are gradu...
Breastfeeding and formula feeding are two ways to feed an infant after it is born. The importance of...
This research study examines the relationship between breastfeeding patterns and age of entry into c...
Background: Breastfeeding assessment in the hospital to determine adequacy of feeds remains controve...
Objective: To explore longitudinal associations between bottle-feeding and maternal encouragement of...
This study tested the milk flow rates and variability in flow of currently available nipples used fo...
To investigate the prevalence and predictors of expressed breast-milk feeding in healthy full-term i...
Abstract: Several key studies highlight the importance of breastfeeding and there is a broad consens...
Objective: This study aims to understand how women interpret infant formula advertising to aid under...
The complexity of human milk-feeding behaviours may not be captured using simpler definitions of “ex...
It is hypothesized that the visual and weight cues afforded by bottle-feeding may lead mothers to ov...
Breastfeeding rates are low in the UK, where approximately one quarter of infants receive a breastmi...
Background:Objectives of current study were to know the prevailing infant feeding practices in infan...
Most U.S. mothers who feed their human milk (HM) to their infants now use pumps and bottles or cups ...