1999
DOI: 10.1046/j.1525-1446.1999.00120.x
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Health‐Enhancing Behaviors Correlated with Breastfeeding Among a National Sample of Mothers

Abstract: Participation in health-enhancing behaviors not only influences the health of the mother, but of the newborn child as well. Characteristics of the mother, especially with regard to the practice of health-enhancing behaviors, have typically been excluded from studies examining breastfeeding. The purpose of this study was to identify health-enhancing behaviors correlated with breastfeeding among a national sample of mothers. The third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES III) provided the sam… Show more

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Cited by 36 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Therefore, breastfeeding may also be a marker of health‐promoting behaviors, rather than a causal determinant of improved cardiometabolic outcomes itself. Several studies in Western populations have demonstrated that women who breastfeed are generally wealthier and more likely to engage in other beneficial health behaviors than women who do not breastfeed 15, 25, 26. However, this pattern is reversed in the present study, in which poorer women from rural areas of China were more likely to breastfeed for a longer duration than their wealthier urban counterparts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Therefore, breastfeeding may also be a marker of health‐promoting behaviors, rather than a causal determinant of improved cardiometabolic outcomes itself. Several studies in Western populations have demonstrated that women who breastfeed are generally wealthier and more likely to engage in other beneficial health behaviors than women who do not breastfeed 15, 25, 26. However, this pattern is reversed in the present study, in which poorer women from rural areas of China were more likely to breastfeed for a longer duration than their wealthier urban counterparts.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women who breastfeed longer have been shown to have greater intake of fruits and vegetables themselves, 18,19 and maternal dietary preferences are important independent predictors of children' s dietary preferences. 20 However, in the UK and Portuguese cohort studies where data on maternal diet were available, longer breastfeeding durations remained significantly associated with higher fruit and vegetable intakes in childhood after adjustment for maternal fruit or vegetable intake.…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Knowledge about health-promoting behaviors for new mothers could assist in building a women's identity as a new mother (Walker, 1989), may assist in the lessening of depressive symptoms postpartum by promoting positive well-being after childbirth (Walker & Wilging, 2000), and can impart health benefits for the mother and child (Pesa & Shelton, 1999). There are also significant health benefits in practicing health-promoting behaviors.…”
Section: Perceived Stress and Health Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%