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Intergenerational breastfeeding practices among parents and children: 1993 Pelotas (Brazil) birth cohort

Authors :
Helen Gonçalves
Giovanna Gatica-Domínguez
Maria Cecília Formoso Assunção
Leonardo Pozza Santos
Isabel Oliveira Bierhals
Juliana dos Santos Vaz
Gilberto Kac
Ana Paula Neutzling Gomes
Ana M. B. Menezes
Source :
Maternal & Child Nutrition
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

The objective of this study was to investigate intergenerational breastfeeding practices according to parental sex and age at delivery in the 1993 Pelotas (Brazil) birth cohort study. This is a prospective birth cohort study, and at the 22‐year follow‐up, a substudy with all children of the cohort members who had become parents was conducted (93Cohort‐II). First generation breastfeeding data were collected at 3 months and 4‐year‐old follow‐ups. In the 93Cohort‐II, parents answered a questionnaire about their children's breastfeeding practices. Adjusted Tobit and Poisson regression models with robust variance were applied to estimate the association between predominant parental breastfeeding duration and exclusive breastfeeding duration of the children at 3 and 6 months. Out of 3,810 cohort participants, 955 (25%) had delivered at least one live‐born infant, and 1,222 children were assessed. Fifty‐four percent of parents were ≤19 years old. Direct effects of predominant parental breastfeeding duration on exclusive breastfeeding duration of their children were only observed when data were stratified by parental age: children born to parents aged ≥20 years old and who were predominantly breastfed for at least 3 months presented higher exclusive breastfeeding duration and higher prevalence of being exclusively breastfed for at least 3 months. When analyses were stratified by mothers and fathers, the result remained significant only among mothers. Longer predominant breastfeeding duration in the first generation was associated with longer exclusive breastfeeding duration in the second generation, but only among older mothers. Education and social support surrounding breastfeeding should be intensified among fathers and younger parents to create a positive environment supportive of breastfeeding.

Details

ISSN :
17408709 and 17408695
Volume :
17
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Maternal & Child Nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....26366819b6336601280e51f53c4e8e0e