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Promotion of breast-feeding, health, and growth among hospital-born neonates, and among infants of a rural area of Costa Rica

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Mata Jiménez, Leonardo
Allen, María de los Ángeles
Jiménez, Patricia
García, María Eugenia
Vargas, William
Rodríguez, María E.
Valerín, Carlos

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Diarrhea and Malnutrition. Interactions, Mechanisms, and Interventions.Editors: Lincoln C. Chen, Nevin S. Scrimshaw, 1983,177-202

Abstract

decline in the incidence of breast-feeding in many developing nations \--as been recorded in recent years, often in conjunction with (a) rapid changes in way of life, (b) migration from rural to urban,- centers, (c) incorporation of women into the labor force (especially in industry), and (d) increase in stress, anxiety, and violence in transitional and modern societies. The marked decline in incidence and duration of breast-feeding throughout the world is a matter of international concern. The importance of breast-feeding, particularly in developing societies, stems from its health-promoting effect, as it provides the best food known for infants, protects the child against a variety of debilitating infectious processes, and encourages attachment between mother and infant.' Furthermore, successful breast-feeding indirectly reduces the ills of bottle- feeding, especially in developing nations, as epidemiological observation in many countries has revealed that early weaning is often associated with severe infant malnutrition, neglect, child abuse, abandonment, and premature death

Description

capítulo de libro -- Universidad de Costa Rica. Instituto de investigaciones en Salud, 1983. Publicado en Diarrhea and Malnutrition. Interactions, Mechanisms and Interventions. L.C. Chen & N.S. Scrimshaw, editors. Plenum Press, N.Y. pp. 177-202, 1983.

Keywords

Salud Pública, Lactancia Materna, Nutrición del niño

Citation

http://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007%2F978-1-4615-9284-6_12

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