The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design

Abstract Background The objective of this study is to examine the effects of macro-level factors – welfare state policies and public health initiatives – on breastfeeding initiation among eighteen high-income countries. Methods This study utilizes fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis methods t...

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Main Author: Amanda Marie Lubold
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-07-01
Series:International Breastfeeding Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13006-017-0122-0
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spelling doaj-e5d210f2be7d42d29207dc393f89bf6c2020-11-25T00:47:06ZengBMCInternational Breastfeeding Journal1746-43582017-07-0112111110.1186/s13006-017-0122-0The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research designAmanda Marie Lubold0Department of Multidisciplinary Studies, Indiana State UniversityAbstract Background The objective of this study is to examine the effects of macro-level factors – welfare state policies and public health initiatives – on breastfeeding initiation among eighteen high-income countries. Methods This study utilizes fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis methods to examine the combinations of conditions leading to both high and low national breastfeeding initiation rates among eighteen high-income countries. Results The most common pathway leading to high breastfeeding initiation is the combination of conditions including a high percentage of women in parliament, a low national cesarean section rate, and either low family spending, high rates of maternity leave, or high rates of women working part-time. The most common pathway leading to low breastfeeding initiation includes the necessary condition of low national adherence to the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative. Conclusion This research suggests that there is a connection between broad level welfare state polices, public health initiatives, and breastfeeding initiation. Compliance with the WHO/UNICEF initiatives depends on welfare regime policies and overall support for women in both productive and reproductive labor.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13006-017-0122-0Breastfeeding initiationComparative analysisPublic health initiativesFamily policies
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda Marie Lubold
spellingShingle Amanda Marie Lubold
The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
International Breastfeeding Journal
Breastfeeding initiation
Comparative analysis
Public health initiatives
Family policies
author_facet Amanda Marie Lubold
author_sort Amanda Marie Lubold
title The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
title_short The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
title_full The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
title_fullStr The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
title_full_unstemmed The effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
title_sort effect of family policies and public health initiatives on breastfeeding initiation among 18 high-income countries: a qualitative comparative analysis research design
publisher BMC
series International Breastfeeding Journal
issn 1746-4358
publishDate 2017-07-01
description Abstract Background The objective of this study is to examine the effects of macro-level factors – welfare state policies and public health initiatives – on breastfeeding initiation among eighteen high-income countries. Methods This study utilizes fuzzy-set Qualitative Comparative Analysis methods to examine the combinations of conditions leading to both high and low national breastfeeding initiation rates among eighteen high-income countries. Results The most common pathway leading to high breastfeeding initiation is the combination of conditions including a high percentage of women in parliament, a low national cesarean section rate, and either low family spending, high rates of maternity leave, or high rates of women working part-time. The most common pathway leading to low breastfeeding initiation includes the necessary condition of low national adherence to the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative. Conclusion This research suggests that there is a connection between broad level welfare state polices, public health initiatives, and breastfeeding initiation. Compliance with the WHO/UNICEF initiatives depends on welfare regime policies and overall support for women in both productive and reproductive labor.
topic Breastfeeding initiation
Comparative analysis
Public health initiatives
Family policies
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13006-017-0122-0
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