Professional Mothers and Breast Feeding Practices
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21649/akemu.v6i1.1970Keywords:
Breast feeding, professional mothers.Abstract
While counseling mothers about exclusive breast feeding; we usually ignore the relationship between maternal employment and infant feeding practices and knowledge about lactation. The study was conducted on 200 employed and 200 non employed women. Breast feeding practices are greatly influenced by the employment of mother with 85.4% non-employed mothers and 41.2% employed women going in for exclusive breast feeding in first four months (p<O.OO2). Similarly, 38.8% employed ladies started combined breast and bottle feeding since birth (P<0.0015). The parity and socioeconomic status did not change feeding practices. The knowledge and information of breast feeding and weaning was better ¡n employed women than their unemployed counterparts (36.1% Vs 21.7%; P<O.O1).Higher social class tended to be more aware (56.7% vs 15.3% p<O.OO1). The primpiparas had less knowledge than nulliparas (23.5% vs 34.8%, P<O.O1).
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
This is an open-access journal and all the published articles / items are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. For comments publications@kemu.edu.pk