2021
DOI: 10.1016/j.wombi.2020.04.008
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Women's experiences with breastfeeding in public: An integrative review

Abstract: Background: Much evidence around public breastfeeding does not reflect experiences of the key stakeholder, the breastfeeding woman, and focuses upon the audience. Selective evidence has explored breastfeeding experiences revealing challenges with public breastfeeding as a serendipitous finding. Although women's experiences have been explored in specific contexts, insight into commonalities reflective of an international perspective is unknown.Objective: to explore, review and synthesise published literature on… Show more

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Cited by 42 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The high rates of first day in-hospital exclusive breastfeeding observed may be explained by a supportive sociopolitical environment that has led several hospitals to obtain accreditation as BFH and a favorable sociocultural context where breastfeeding is generally encouraged and not frowned upon when done in public, unlike what has been reported for other high income countries (Hauck et al, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The high rates of first day in-hospital exclusive breastfeeding observed may be explained by a supportive sociopolitical environment that has led several hospitals to obtain accreditation as BFH and a favorable sociocultural context where breastfeeding is generally encouraged and not frowned upon when done in public, unlike what has been reported for other high income countries (Hauck et al, 2020).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…Many mothers report feeling uncomfortable or stigmatized when breastfeeding in public. 33,34 Although participants did not expound on this connection, public shaming and stigmatizing of Black mothers while breastfeeding may be linked to long held norms about the role and position of women. Through chattel slavery, Black women could not comply with antebellum America's Cult of True Womanhood principals of piety, purity, submissiveness, and domesticity.…”
Section: Fig 3 (Continued)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These affect how women's actions are perceived and influence societal understanding and acceptance of their behaviour, including in relation to the exchange and use of human milk (Cassidy, Dowling, Dykes, & Mahon, 2018;Cassidy et al 2019;Kent, Fannin, & Dowling, 2019). Breastmilk sharing is undermined by the stigmatisation of breastfeeding in the global North (Tomori, Palmquist & Dowling, 2016;Grant, Mannay, & Morzella, 2017;Bresnahan, Zhu, Zhuang, & Yan 2019), the sexualisation of breasts (Dowling, Naidoo, & Pontin, 2012;Grant, 2016;Haucka, Bradfielda, & Kuliukasb, 2020) and the dichotomy whereby breastmilk is both perceived as dirty/'matter out of place' and as 'liquid gold' (Douglas, 2002(Douglas, [1966; Dowling, 2019)-contributing to the 'yuk' factor which may be invoked when discussing the use of another mother's milk (Shaw, 2004). Women who use other mother's milk may feel inhibited in discussing it, both because of these perceptions and because of their feelings about not being able to breastfeed their baby as they would wish (Esquerra-Zwiers et al, 2016;Shafer, Ashada, & Palmquist, 2018).…”
Section: Understanding the Use/sharing Of Human Milkmentioning
confidence: 99%