Marketing Breastfeeding—Reversing Corporate Influence on Infant Feeding Practices

被引:0
|
作者
Deborah L. Kaplan
Kristina M. Graff
机构
[1] Bureau of Maternal,New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
[2] Infant and Reproductive Health,Center for Health and Wellbeing
[3] Princeton University,undefined
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2008年 / 85卷
关键词
Breastfeeding; Corporate influence; Infant; Nutrition; Infant feeding; Infant formula;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Breast milk is the gold standard for infant nutrition and the only necessary food for the first 6 months of an infant’s life. Infant formula is deficient and inferior to breast milk in meeting infants’ nutritional needs. The infant formula industry has contributed to low rates of breastfeeding through various methods of marketing and advertising infant formula. Today, in New York City, although the majority of mothers initiate breastfeeding (~85%), a minority of infants is breastfed exclusively at 8 weeks postpartum (~25%). The article reviews the practices of the formula industry and the impact of these practices. It then presents the strategic approach taken by the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene and its partners to change hospital practices and educate health care providers and the public on the benefits of breast milk, and provides lessons learned from these efforts to make breastfeeding the normative and usual method of infant feeding in New York City.
引用
收藏
页码:486 / 504
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Marketing breastfeeding - Reversing corporate influence on infant feeding practices
    Kaplan, Deborah L.
    Graff, Kristina M.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF URBAN HEALTH-BULLETIN OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MEDICINE, 2008, 85 (04): : 486 - 504
  • [2] Marketing Breastfeeding—Reversing Corporate Influence on Infant Feeding Practices
    Deborah L. Kaplan
    Kristina M. Graff
    [J]. Journal of Urban Health, 2008, 85 (4) : 505 - 505
  • [3] Infant feeding practices and deterioration of breastfeeding in Mexico
    Gonzalez de Cosio, Teresita
    Escobar-Zaragoza, Leticia
    Dinorah Gonzalez-Castell, Luz
    Angel Rivera-Dommarco, Juan
    [J]. SALUD PUBLICA DE MEXICO, 2013, 55 : S170 - S179
  • [4] Breastfeeding knowledge, breastfeeding confidence, and infant feeding plans: Effects on actual feeding practices
    Chezem, J
    Friesen, C
    Boettcher, J
    [J]. JOGNN-JOURNAL OF OBSTETRIC GYNECOLOGIC AND NEONATAL NURSING, 2003, 32 (01): : 40 - 47
  • [5] Infant feeding practices and breastfeeding duration in Japan: A review
    Inoue M.
    Binns C.W.
    Otsuka K.
    Jimba M.
    Matsubara M.
    [J]. International Breastfeeding Journal, 7 (1)
  • [6] Knowledge of Breastfeeding Recommendations and Breastfeeding Duration: A Survival Analysis on Infant Feeding Practices II
    Wallenborn, Jordyn T.
    Ihongbe, Timothy
    Rozario, Sylvia
    Masho, Saba W.
    [J]. BREASTFEEDING MEDICINE, 2017, 12 (03) : 156 - 162
  • [7] An Assessment of the Breastfeeding Practices and Infant Feeding Pattern among Mothers in Mauritius
    Motee, Ashmika
    Ramasawmy, Deerajen
    Pugo-Gunsam, Prity
    Jeewon, Rajesh
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NUTRITION AND METABOLISM, 2013, 2013
  • [8] Exclusive breastfeeding rate and factors associated with infant feeding practices in Indonesia
    Ananta, Yovita
    Gandaputra, Ellen
    Waiman, Elina
    Partiwi, I. Gusti Ayu Nyoman
    Marzuki, Nanis S.
    Yohmi, Elizabeth
    Panjaitan, Eveline
    Oswari, Hanifah
    Hegar, Badriul
    [J]. PAEDIATRICA INDONESIANA, 2016, 56 (01) : 24 - 31
  • [9] Breastfeeding but not Exclusively: Exploration of Chinese American Mothers' Infant Feeding Practices
    Goldbort, Joanne
    Bresnahan, Mary
    Zhuang, Jie
    Bogdan-Lovis, Elizabeth
    Park, Sunyoung
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HUMAN LACTATION, 2021, 37 (02) : 380 - 389
  • [10] How the marketing practices of commercial milk formula companies impact infant breastfeeding practices in China
    Zhu, Zhonghai
    Narayan, Anuradha
    Zhang, Shuyi
    Wang, Liang
    Zhu, Yingze
    Yang, Wenfang
    Cheng, Yue
    Zeng, Lingxia
    Chang, Suying
    [J]. BMJ GLOBAL HEALTH, 2023, 8 (11):