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Both parents' immigration status is associated with the likelihood that an infant is breast-fed.


Immigrant women participating in a multisite, longitudinal study longitudinal study

a chronological study in epidemiology which attempts to establish a relationship between an antecedent cause and a subsequent effect. See also cohort study.
 were more likely than their U.S.-born counterparts to breast-feed breast-feed
v.
To feed a baby mother's milk from the breast; suckle.
, but the longer foreign-born women lived in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. , the less likely they were to breast-feed. (1) Similar associations were found between fathers' place of birth and the odds that an infant was breast-fed breast·feed or breast-feed  
v. breast-fed , breast-feed·ing, breast-feeds

v.tr.
To feed (a baby) mother's milk from the breast; suckle.

v.intr.
To breastfeed a baby.
. In addition, the findings partly contradict the so-called Hispanic paradox--the well-documented observation that Hispanics tend to have unexpectedly good health outcomes, given their socioeconomic status--in that U.S.-born Hispanics breast-fed at rates similar to those among U.S.-born non-Hispanics.

The data came from a survey conducted among women who gave birth in 1998-2000 at 75 hospitals in 15 states and the fathers of their infants. To examine immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important.  status and ethnicity as determinants of breastfeeding, analysts used information collected from 4,207 mothers and 3,013 fathers just after the birth and in follow-up interviews about a year later. They used logistic regression In statistics, logistic regression is a regression model for binomially distributed response/dependent variables. It is useful for modeling the probability of an event occurring as a function of other factors.  to identify characteristics associated with the likelihood that a woman had breast-fed the infant at all and, if she had, whether she had done so for at least six months.

At baseline, women in the sample were 25 years old, on average; the majority were single, had at least a high school education and had been employed at some time during the year preceding the birth. Twenty-seven percent were Hispanic, 22% were white and 47% were black 15% said that their baby's father was not of their race. Eight in 10 of the women were U.S.-born; immigrants had lived in the United States for an average of almost 10 years. For 39% of the women, this birth was their first; overall, 82% had seen a physician during the first trimester Noun 1. first trimester - time period extending from the first day of the last menstrual period through 12 weeks of gestation
trimester - a period of three months; especially one of the three three-month periods into which human pregnancy is divided
 of pregnancy, and 19% had smoked while pregnant. Nine percent had had a low-birth-weight infant Noun 1. low-birth-weight infant - an infant born weighing less than 5.5 pounds (2500 grams) regardless of gestational age; "a low-birth-weight infant is at risk for developing lack of oxygen during labor"
low-birth-weight baby
. Fifty-seven percent of the women breastfed at all during the follow-up period; 36% of this group breast-fed for at least six months. The fathers in the sample were, on average, 28 years old at baseline; two-thirds had a high school or higher education.

The first set of multivariate analyses indicated that U.S.-born women were significantly less likely than immigrants to breast-feed at all (odds ratio, 0.2) and to do so for six months or more (0.3). Furthermore, for every year that an immigrant woman lived in the United States, her odds of breast-feeding breast-feeding /breast-feed·ing/ (brest´fed?ing) nursing; the feeding of an infant at the mother's breast.  declined by 4% and her odds of doing so for at least six months declined by 3%. White and Hispanic women did not differ on either breast-feeding measure; blacks, however, were significantly less likely than Hispanics to breast-feed at all.

Other findings were consistent with results of earlier research. The odds of breast-feeding were elevated for women having a first birth; those who had, or whose baby's father had, more than a high school education; and those who had visited a physician during the first trimester of pregnancy. Single women and smokers had reduced odds of breast-feeding, and the likelihood of breast-feeding declined as maternal age maternal age,
n the age of the mother at the period of conception.
 increased. The likelihood of breast-feeding for at least six months was similarly associated with marital status marital status,
n the legal standing of a person in regard to his or her marriage state.
, mother's education and smoking; however, first-time mothers had reduced odds of breast-feeding for six months or more, as did women whose infant had a low birth weight.

A second set of regression analyses, controlling for fathers' place of birth rather than mothers', indicated that infants whose fathers were U.S.-born were less likely than others to be breast-fed (odds ratio, 0.2) and to be breastfed for six months or more (0.5). For each year that a foreign-born man had lived in the United States, his baby's odds of being breast-fed at all and for at least six months were reduced (by 5% and 2%, respectively).

In an examination of breast-feeding rates (adjusted for all of the characteristics included in the multivariate analysis multivariate analysis,
n a statistical approach used to evaluate multiple variables.

multivariate analysis,
n a set of techniques used when variation in several variables has to be studied simultaneously.
), the analysts found that 89% of immigrants and 52% of U.S.-born women breast-fed at all; within each group, rates among Mexicans, other Hispanics and non-Hispanics were statistically indistinguishable. Overall, 54% of foreign-born and 30% of U.S.-born women who breast-fed did so for at least six months, and these rates varied by ethnicity: Among immigrants, non-Hispanics had a significantly lower rate (40%) than either Hispanic group (59% for each); among U.S.-born women, non-Hispanics (32%) had a significant]y higher rate than non-Mexican Hispanics (21%).

The analysts acknowledge that their data do not permit them to identify causal mechanisms underlying the differences they found in breast-feeding behaviors, which they suspect are attributable to differences in cultural norms. However, they conclude that their findings leave no doubt "that [two] populations, Hispanics born in the United States and fathers, should not be overlooked in breastfeeding promotion efforts."

REFERENCE

(1.) Gibson-Davis CM and Brooks-Gunn J, Couples' immigration status and ethnicity as determinants of breastfeeding, American Journal of Public Health The American Journal of Public Health (AJPH) is a peer reviewed monthly journal of the American Public Health Association (APHA). The Journal also regularly publishes authoritative editorials and commentaries and serves as a forum for the analysis of health policy. , 2006, 96(4): 641-646.
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Author:Hollander, D.,
Publication:Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 2006
Words:824
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