Breastfeeding in NSW


Book Description

"Breastfeeding in NSW: Promotion, Protection and Support ... released in 2006 ... was the first comprehensive evidence-based directive in Australia with specific actions to promote and support breastfeeding within a state health system ... The Policy has been revised to better consider recent changes in the national and state policy context ... In addition, revisions have been made in light of new evidence ... from recent systematic reviews and consideration of Policy implementation to date."--p. 1.




Overview of Recent Reviews of Interventions to Promote and Support Breastfeeding


Book Description

"This report summarises systematic reviews of interventions to promote breastfeeding. The report has been produced by the NSW Centre for Public Health Nutrition as part of the specific reference material required to address the priority issues identified in Eat Well NSW, NSW Health’s Strategic Directions for Public Health Nutrition 2003-2007 (NSW Health 2004a). It aims to assist health professionals in NSW in planning selected types of policies and programs to promote and support breastfeeding"--Executive summary p. vi.




Breastfeeding in NSW


Book Description

" This policy is designed to demonstrate NSW Health's commitment towards improved population breastfeeding practices and guide action"--p. [2]










Australian National Breastfeeding Strategy 2010-2015


Book Description

"The Strategy recognises the biological, health, social, cultural, environmental and economic importance of breastfeeding and provides a framework for priorities and action for Australian governments at all levels to protect, promote, support and monitor breastfeeding throughout Australia"--Foreword.







Infant Feeding Practices


Book Description

It’s natural... It’s unsightly... It’s normal... It’s dangerous. To breastfeed or not? For millions of women around the world, this personal decision is influenced by numerous social, cultural, and health factors. Infant Feeding Practices is the first book to delve into these factors from a global perspective, revealing striking similarities and differences from country to country. Dispatches from Asia, Australia, Africa, the U.K., and the U.S. explore as wide a gamut of salient issues affecting feeding practices as traditional beliefs about colostrums, “breast is best” campaigns, partner attitudes, workplace culture, direct government intervention, and the pressure to be a “good mother.” Throughout these informative pages, women are seen balancing innovation and tradition to nurture healthy, thriving babies. A sampling of topics covered: • Policy versus practice in infant feeding. • Infant feeding in the age of AIDS. • Managing the lactating body: the view from the U.S. • Motherhood, work, and feeding. • The effects of migration on infant feeding. • From breastfeeding tradition to optimal breastfeeding practice. Infant Feeding Practices is a first-of-its-kind resource for researchers and practioners in maternal and child health, public health, global health, and cultural anthropology seeking empirical findings and culturally diverse information on this sensitive issue.




Baby Friendly, Mother Friendly


Book Description

BABY FRIENDLY/MOTHER FRIENDLY draws its title from the Baby Friendly Hospital Initiative (UNICEF, 1991). This book provides a stimulating discussion of the role of the midwife in the provision of high quality maternity care in both industrialized and developing countries. Divided into two key sections, it first explores the ways in which 'baby "friendliness' (the protection, promotion and support of breastfeeding) can be achieved in practice. Section 2 concentrates on the needs of the mother. The focus here is on the provision of a truly 'mother-friendly' health care environment. The risks of over-professionalization of physiological processes, and the potential of the midwife to be either an enabler or a dis-empowerer are important underlying themes in this thought-provoking book.