Journal of the American Dietetic Association
Volume 92, Issue 3, 1992, Pages 354-355

Attitudes toward breast-feeding and infant feeding among Iranian, Afghan, and Southeast Asian immigrant women in the United States: Implications for health and nutrition education (Article)

Ghaemi-Ahmadi S.*
  • a Families/Preventative Medicine Dept., University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143, United States

Abstract

A nutritionist analyzed data on 150 immigrant mothers living in California but from Iran, Afghanistan, Vietnam, Cambodia, or Laos who had participated in or were eligible for WIC (Women, Infants, and Children), a US supplemental food program, to examine cultural and socioeconomic factors linked with breast feeding practices. 95% of the mothers had exclusively breast fed their infants in their countries compared to 32% after they arrived in the US In fact, 85% exclusively breast fed for at least 5 months in their countries whereas only 14% did so after coming to the US Further, after immigrating to the US, 38% fed their infants both breast milk and formula. Moreover 30% only offered their infants formula. In the US, 82% of Iranian mothers exclusively breast fed their infants compared to 42% of Afghan mothers, 14% of Vietnamese mothers, 19% of Laotian mothers, and 9% of Cambodian mothers (p.00001). Iranian mothers noted societal support for breast feeding in Iran by the postrevolutionary government, by the Moslem religion, and by support groups they formed in the US Mothers who exclusively breast fed their infants reported breast feeding to be more advantageous than the other groups (p.05). The cited advantages included bonding, best food for infant, protection against infection, and successful breast feeding in the past. Mothers who partially or exclusively used formula were more likely to have returned to school, had problems with the infant's presence, consider bottle feeding to be convenient, received free formula, and state economic reasons. Further those who exclusively breast fed were more likely to 1st breast feed their infant in the delivery room than were the other mothers (p.01). These results indicated that economic reasons were the main reason for not breast feeding. Besides US health care providers in the hospital or those involved in WIC did not provide substantial support for breast feeding. Sound recommendations concluded this report.

Author Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Index Keywords

education Infant Nutrition Health Personnel Afghanistan immigrant Origin Americas health promotion population Migrants demography Southern Asia Nutrition Programs Population Dynamics human Developing Countries Asia Ethnic Groups Methodological Studies social aspect Developed Countries priority journal Breast Feeding--beneficial effects Bottle Feeding social support Iran Breast Feeding health United States Asians Cultural Background North America ethnic difference attitude California Infant, Newborn female Socioeconomic Factors Infant socioeconomics questionnaire cultural factor pregnancy health services peer group Article Financing, Government nutrition Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice Questionnaires health education human experiment migration international migration Nutrition Surveys Demographic Factors Health Facilities Southeastern Asia Hospitals Interviews Economic Factors Public Assistance Financial Activities Northern America Delivery of Health Care Population Characteristics Asia, Southeastern primary health care Culture

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-0026752567&partnerID=40&md5=78fc86eea0366d240eb6217a11a08060

ISSN: 00028223
Cited by: 22
Original Language: English