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Fri, 10 Dec 2004 18:16:46 +0200 |
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Dear Barbara,
I found abstract of this article here
<http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/tandf/spae/2004/00000093/00000012/art00016;jsessionid=9dlt8loss0i6d.henrietta>
"Aim: To determine the effects of mother-infant skin-to-skin contact
immediately after birth on infant recognition of their own mother's milk
odour and breastfeeding duration until 1 y of age. Methods: Sixty healthy,
full-term neonates were randomly assigned to group A with skin-to-skin
contact and group B without. One and 4 d after birth, infant responses to
the following odour stimuli were observed: own mother's milk, another
mother's milk, formula, orange juice and distilled water. Infant facial
action was videotaped and the frequency of mouthing movements was evaluated
for each stimulus. Nutritional assessment, focused particularly on
breastfeeding, was performed every 3 mo on participating infants.
Statistical analysis comparing the frequency of mouthing movements with the
aforementioned five different odour exposures was performed by ANOVA with
Fisher's PLSD. Kaplan-Meier analysis with a log-rank test was used to
compare breastfeeding rates between groups. Results: Infants in both groups
responded differently to mother's milk odour (either their own or another
mother's milk) compared to the other stimuli on days 1 and 4. However,
infants in group A demonstrated a larger difference in mouthing movements
between their own and another mother's milk odour at 4 d of age (2.6 ± 1.6)
compared to infants in group B (0.9 ± 2.0, p = 0.01). Infants in group A
were breastfed an average of 1.9 mo longer than the others.
Conclusion: Our study provides evidence that mother-infant skin-to-skin
contact for more than 50 min immediately after birth results in enhanced
infant recognition of their own mother's milk odour and longer breastfeeding
duration"
I really feel for infants who was randomly assigned to group without skin to
skin
Sincerely yours,
Victoria Nesterova, bf supporter,
Kiev, Ukraine
----- Original Message -----
>I received this from Dr Jack Newman and cannot find full article nor the
> abstract doing a NIH search; can anyone help me with this? However, I did
> find a
> wealth of breastfeeding related information from 2004 articles in Acta
> Paediatrica journal and would also like to know how to obtain full text
> from NIH for
> some of these articles including ones on SIDS, adding anti-secretory
> factor to
> mom's cereal to decrease mastitis, etc.
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