Jackson Jessica, Hallam Jenny, Safari Reza
School of Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
College of Health, Psychology and Social Care, University of Derby, Derby, UK.
BMC Womens Health. 2025 Aug 29;25(1):412. doi: 10.1186/s12905-025-03704-4.
The global recommendations of continuing breastfeeding for two years and beyond are not being realised. Barriers to breastfeeding beyond the infancy age of one year continue to be seen globally despite the recognition that facilitating it could prevent 823,000 child and 98,000 parent deaths every year. The visibility of breastfeeding in public, particularly for those who continue to breastfeed, is thought to be reducing and this in turn impacts public acceptability. However, research exploring women's experiences breastfeeding in public typically focuses on newborns. Therefore, this study explores negative experiences of continuing breastfeeding, between the ages of 1 to < 2 years, in a global sample of participants.
A cross-sectional design via an online self-completed questionnaire was adopted to collect data from women, at one point in time, who had experience of breastfeeding a child between the ages of 1-2 years. Participants who had experienced a negative response were asked to share their experiences in a free text question. A content analysis was adopted to explore the information conveyed by the participants through the conceptualising of condensed broad category descriptions.
There were 2,562 women who had a negative experience of breastfeeding in public places, 1,674 from five continents (Europe 994, America 948, Asia 51, Australia 161, Africa 20, Unknown 12) shared their experience. The findings present four categories: Unsolicited Opinion (56%), Judgemental (39%), Indecent Act (16%) and, Prohibited (7%). Commonly there were experiences of unwanted advice or being shamed and stigmatised to undermine breastfeeding practice. More zealous public reactions, such as implying child abuse, sexualising breastfeeding, or expressing shock and disgust were less common. The least likely to occur were experiences of being told to refrain from, move away or cover up.
The findings reaffirmed that there is a wider social stigma experienced by women breastfeeding beyond infancy in public. This highlights that women who continue to breastfeed are being shamed and blamed for their breastfeeding choices. More efforts are needed to address social and cultural challenges, with an increase in wider knowledge to support breastfeeding beyond infancy.
全球关于持续母乳喂养两年及更长时间的建议并未得到落实。尽管人们认识到促进母乳喂养每年可预防82.3万例儿童死亡和9.8万例家长死亡,但在全球范围内,一岁以上婴儿期之后的母乳喂养障碍仍然存在。母乳喂养在公共场所的可见度,尤其是对于那些继续母乳喂养的人来说,被认为正在降低,而这反过来又影响了公众的接受度。然而,探索女性在公共场所母乳喂养经历的研究通常聚焦于新生儿。因此,本研究在全球范围的参与者样本中,探究1至未满2岁持续母乳喂养的负面经历。
采用通过在线自我完成问卷的横断面设计,在某一时刻从有过1至2岁儿童母乳喂养经历的女性中收集数据。经历过负面反应的参与者被要求在一个自由文本问题中分享她们的经历。采用内容分析法,通过对浓缩的宽泛类别描述进行概念化,探索参与者所传达的信息。
有2562名女性在公共场所母乳喂养时有负面经历,来自五大洲的1674名(欧洲994名、美洲948名、亚洲51名、澳大利亚161名、非洲20名、未知地区12名)分享了她们的经历。研究结果呈现出四类:主动提供的意见(56%)、评判性的(39%)、有伤风化的行为(16%)和被禁止的(7%)。常见的是有 unwanted advice(不请自来的建议)或被羞辱和污名化以破坏母乳喂养行为的经历。更狂热的公众反应,如暗示虐待儿童、将母乳喂养性感化或表达震惊和厌恶则较少见。最不可能发生的是被告知停止、离开或遮盖的经历。
研究结果重申,在公共场所,一岁以上的母乳喂养女性面临更广泛的社会污名。这凸显出继续母乳喂养的女性因其母乳喂养选择而受到羞辱和指责。需要做出更多努力来应对社会和文化挑战,增加更广泛的知识以支持一岁以上的母乳喂养。