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Health Education Research Advance Access originally published online on October 13, 2006
Health Education Research 2007 22(4):561-570; doi:10.1093/her/cyl113
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Infant-feeding attitudes of expectant mothers in Northern Ireland

Julie Sittlington1, Barbara Stewart-Knox1,*, Marion Wright2, Ian Bradbury3 and Jane A. Scott4

1 Northern Ireland Centre for Food and Health
2 Institute of Nursing Research and School of Nursing
3 School of Biomedical Science, University of Ulster, Coleraine, Co. Derry BT52 1SA, UK
4 Division of Developmental Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

* Correspondence to: B. Stewart-Knox. E-mail: b.knox{at}ulster.ac.uk

Northern Ireland (NI) has one of the lowest rates of breast-feeding initiation and duration in both the UK and the industrialized world. This study therefore aimed to explore the relationship between infant-feeding attitudes and feeding intention and outcome in expectant mothers within NI. Expectant mothers (n = 200) were recruited from hospital antenatal booking clinics. Each completed a demographic questionnaire and the self-administered Iowa Infant Feeding Attitude Scale (IIFAS). Participants (n = 192) were followed up after birth through the Northern Ireland Maternity System. The IIFAS distinguished between those mothers who intended to breast-feed (higher IIFAS scores) and those who intended to artificially feed (lower IIFAS scores) as well as between those who breast-fed and those who artificially fed on discharge from hospital. The IIFAS was also able to distinguish between mothers in regard to feeding intention and outcome on the basis of education, socio-economic class, income and marital status. This suggests that the IIFAS could prove useful in the targeting and evaluation of intervention to promote breast-feeding.

Received on January 25, 2006; accepted on August 24, 2006


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