Mary Muse Consulting, LLC, St. Louis, MO, USA.
14611 University of Missouri-St. Louis, MO, USA.
J Hum Lact. 2021 May;37(2):289-300. doi: 10.1177/0890334421999304. Epub 2021 Mar 9.
Many individuals comprise a nursing mother's social support network. Grandmothers within African American families, historically, have played a vital role in the transmission of culture. Understanding intergenerational perspectives within African American families related to infant feeding and scholarship about breastfeeding is critical, given the breastfeeding patterns among African American women.
To describe intergenerational perspectives within African American families, where the mother has successfully breastfed.
A prospective, cross-sectional, qualitative design using semi-structured interviews was used. African American nursing mothers and maternal grandmothers ( = 14) residing in the Metro-St. Louis area, who reflected economic and educational diversity, were recruited. Inductive and iterative data analysis, framed by Black Feminist Theory allowed for emerging patterns reflecting the participants' voices.
Three of the six (50%) grandmother participants had breastfed. The majority of the mother participants were married ( 5; 62.5%) and had a college degree ( 4; 50.0%) or a high school diploma ( 1; 12.5%); and four (50.0%) had received the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC). Three patterns emerged: (a) intergenerational connections; (b) changes in breastfeeding experiences over time; and (c) going with the flow (referring to the choice to work within the constraints of one's circumstances). Grandmothers supported mothers' breastfeeding decisions; grandmothers who had breastfed benefited from the updated information the mothers provided; and grandmothers who did not breastfeed acquired new breastfeeding knowledge, which informed the ways they supported the mothers.
The intergenerational perspectives surrounding breastfeeding within African American families participating in this study offer future research directions.
许多人构成了哺乳期母亲的社会支持网络。在非裔美国家庭中,祖母们历来在文化传承中发挥着至关重要的作用。鉴于非裔美国女性的母乳喂养模式,了解非裔美国家庭中与婴儿喂养相关的代际观点以及关于母乳喂养的学术研究至关重要。
描述非裔美国家庭中母亲成功母乳喂养的代际观点。
采用前瞻性、横断面、定性设计,使用半结构式访谈。招募了居住在密苏里州都会区的成功母乳喂养的非裔美国哺乳期母亲和外祖母(n = 14),她们反映了经济和教育的多样性。采用黑人女性主义理论框架的归纳和迭代数据分析,使参与者的声音反映出新兴模式。
6 位祖母参与者中有 3 位(50%)曾母乳喂养。大多数母亲参与者已婚(5 位,62.5%),拥有大学学历(4 位,50.0%)或高中学历(1 位,12.5%);有 4 位(50.0%)接受过妇女、婴儿和儿童特别补充营养计划(WIC)。出现了三个模式:(a)代际联系;(b)母乳喂养体验随时间的变化;(c)顺其自然(指在个人环境限制内工作的选择)。祖母们支持母亲的母乳喂养决定;曾母乳喂养的祖母从母亲提供的更新信息中受益;未母乳喂养的祖母获得了新的母乳喂养知识,这影响了她们支持母亲的方式。
参与本研究的非裔美国家庭中围绕母乳喂养的代际观点为未来的研究提供了方向。