Carolina Consortium on Human Development, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Matern Child Nutr. 2013 Jan;9(1):90-8. doi: 10.1111/j.1740-8709.2011.00378.x. Epub 2011 Dec 20.
This paper presents a new conceptual model that generates predictions about breastfeeding decisions and identifies interactions that affect outcomes. We offer a contextual approach to infant feeding that models multi-directional influences by expanding on the evolutionary parent-offspring conflict and situation-specific breastfeeding theories. The main hypothesis generated from our framework suggests that simultaneously addressing breastfeeding costs and benefits, in relation to how they are interpreted by mothers, will be most effective. Our approach focuses on contributors to the attitudes and commitment underlying breastfeeding outcomes, beginning in the prenatal period. We conclude that some maternal-offspring conflict is inherent with the dynamic infant feeding relationship. Guidance that anticipates and addresses family trade-offs over time can be incorporated into breastfeeding support for families.
本文提出了一个新的概念模型,用于预测母乳喂养决策,并确定影响结果的相互作用。我们提供了一种针对婴儿喂养的情境方法,通过扩展进化中的亲代-后代冲突和特定情境下的母乳喂养理论,对多向影响进行建模。我们的框架产生的主要假设表明,同时解决与母亲的解释有关的母乳喂养成本和收益将是最有效的。我们的方法侧重于构成母乳喂养结果背后的态度和承诺的贡献者,从产前阶段开始。我们得出结论,母婴冲突在动态的婴儿喂养关系中是固有的。随着时间的推移,可以将预测和解决家庭权衡的指导纳入对家庭的母乳喂养支持中。