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- Title
Working Mothers' Infant Feeding Experiences During Their Children's Transition to Child Care: A Qualitative Study.
- Authors
Goulden, Ami; Mann, Linda; Norris, Deborah; Rossiter, Misty
- Abstract
Infant feeding is closely related to children's life-long health and well-being. It is common for parents to withstand infant feeding challenges and with a plethora of guidelines and advice caregivers can face a great deal of stress. Extra-familial child care and employment circumstances also impact infant feeding, yet little is known about how caregivers experience them. This qualitative study explores working mothers' infant feeding experiences during their children's transition to a child care setting. Six mothers with at least one child age 6 to 18 months old in child care participated in semistructured interviews. The themes identified using an Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis approach were infant feeding burden on mothers, weaning stress, responsive feeding style, seeking professional support, and child care setting partnership. Mothers experienced a significant infant feeding burden due to a gendered division of labor and lack of professional resources and support. The infant feeding burden decreased considerably once children transitioned to child care and some feeding responsibilities were reallocated. Recommendations are discussed for how child care settings can play a more substantial role in supporting families with infant feeding through knowledge translation strategies and modeling. Future research directives assessing how partners can better assist mothers with infant feeding are suggested. Highlights: Mothers who experienced infant feeding challenges, especially breastfeeding, expressed both guilt and shame. There was a gendered division of labor as mothers were predominantly responsible for infant feeding and the caregiver burden. Mothers faced difficulty locating timely and accessible resources and supports related to infant feeding. Caregiver burden significantly decreased once children transitioned from home to child care settings. Mothers developed trust with the child care setting and adopted infant feeding approaches used by the early childhood educators at home.
- Subjects
CANADA; CHILD care; FOCUS groups; HUMAN research subjects; TRANSITIONAL care; INTERVIEWING; INFANT nutrition; QUALITATIVE research; MOTHERHOOD; CONCEPTUAL structures; INFORMED consent (Medical law); PSYCHOSOCIAL factors; PUERPERIUM; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; STATISTICAL sampling; DATA analysis software; THEMATIC analysis; WORKING mothers; PSYCHOLOGICAL stress
- Publication
Journal of Child & Family Studies, 2023, Vol 32, Issue 8, p2214
- ISSN
1062-1024
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10826-022-02381-3