Mothers' and fathers' experiences of breastfeeding and returning to paid work after birth: A mixed-method study.

IF 2.8 2区 医学 Q3 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Jennifer Ayton, Sue Pearson, Alison Graham, Gemma Kitsos, Emily Hansen
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Abstract

This mixed-method study explored the experiences of mothers and fathers combining breastfeeding with returning to paid employment after childbirth. Tasmanian State Service employees participated in an online survey and phone interviews. A total of 130 parents completed the survey, and 42 participated in 60-min phone interviews. The survey had more female respondents (109) than male (21), and only 4 of the 42 interviews were with fathers. The sample consisted mainly of professional women (84%) and men (16%), predominantly Australian-born (88%). Two-thirds of participants worked part-time (62%), taking either unpaid (52%) or paid leave (61%) within the first 12 months after birth. The majority (88%) preferred to breastfeed, with the mean age of the first formula feed being 4.1 months. A narrative analysis of the qualitative data, informed by work-family conflict theory, reveals that transitioning back to paid work while breastfeeding is challenging for both mothers and fathers. Parents face multiple conflicts between paid work, family responsibilities and maintaining breastfeeding. The emotional and physical demands of feeding, expressing, storing and transporting breast milk, combined with often inadequate workplace facilities, policies and gender discrimination, add to parental pressure. Mothers bear the greatest burden, while fathers' roles and needs are often overlooked in the workplace. The major finding of this study is that breastfeeding is insufficiently recognised as an integral part of the return-to-work process for both parents, generating a form of work-family breastfeeding conflict, where work (part-time or full-time) interferes with family responsibilities and breastfeeding. Family-friendly breastfeeding policies based on equity principles are needed to address workplace gender inequality and discrimination and better support parents in combining work and breastfeeding.

母亲和父亲产后母乳喂养和重返有偿工作的经历:混合方法研究。
这项混合方法研究探讨了母亲和父亲将母乳喂养与产后重返有偿工作相结合的经验。塔斯马尼亚州公务员参与了在线调查和电话访谈。共有 130 名父母完成了调查,42 名父母参加了 60 分钟的电话访谈。调查中,女性受访者(109 人)多于男性(21 人),42 次访谈中只有 4 次是针对父亲的。样本主要由职业女性(84%)和男性(16%)组成,主要在澳大利亚出生(88%)。三分之二的参与者从事兼职工作(62%),在产后 12 个月内休无薪假(52%)或带薪假(61%)。大多数人(88%)选择母乳喂养,首次喂养配方奶粉的平均年龄为 4.1 个月。根据工作与家庭冲突理论对定性数据进行的叙述性分析表明,在哺乳期间重返带薪工作岗位对母亲和父亲来说都具有挑战性。父母在有偿工作、家庭责任和维持母乳喂养之间面临多重冲突。喂养、挤出、储存和运输母乳所需的情感和体力,再加上工作场所往往不完善的设施、政策和性别歧视,都增加了父母的压力。母亲的负担最重,而父亲的角色和需求往往在工作场所被忽视。这项研究的主要发现是,母乳喂养作为父母双方重返工作岗位过程中不可或缺的一部分,并没有得到充分的认可,从而产生了一种工作与家庭之间的母乳喂养冲突,即工作(兼职或全职)干扰了家庭责任和母乳喂养。需要制定基于公平原则的关爱家庭的母乳喂养政策,以解决工作场所的性别不平等和歧视问题,更好地支持父母兼顾工作和母乳喂养。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Maternal and Child Nutrition
Maternal and Child Nutrition 医学-小儿科
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
8.80%
发文量
144
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Maternal & Child Nutrition addresses fundamental aspects of nutrition and its outcomes in women and their children, both in early and later life, and keeps its audience fully informed about new initiatives, the latest research findings and innovative ways of responding to changes in public attitudes and policy. Drawing from global sources, the Journal provides an invaluable source of up to date information for health professionals, academics and service users with interests in maternal and child nutrition. Its scope includes pre-conception, antenatal and postnatal maternal nutrition, women''s nutrition throughout their reproductive years, and fetal, neonatal, infant, child and adolescent nutrition and their effects throughout life.
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