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Maternal and Infant Nutrition and Nurture Unit (MAINN)

School of Community Health and Midwifery

Faculty of Health and Wellbeing

 

 

Nutrition and Nurture in Infancy and Childhood:

Bio-Cultural Perspectives

 

Three day international, interdisciplinary conference:  Mon 10th, Tues 11th and Wed 12th June 2019

Grange over Sands, Cumbria

https://www.uclan.ac.uk/venue-hire/nutrition-nurture-Infancy-childhood-perspectives.php

 

Conference Convenor:  Fiona Dykes, Professor of Maternal and Infant Health, Maternal and Infant Nutrition and Nurture Unit (MAINN), University of Central Lancashire, Preston, UK. 

 

The conference links closely with the international journal Maternal and Child Nutrition (Wiley-Blackwell Publishing) that has its editorial office in MAINN.  The journal is edited by Associate Professor Victoria Hall Moran, based in MAINN, and Professor Rafael Perez-Escamilla, Yale University, USA.

 

The conference aims to:

·         Illuminate socio-cultural, political and economic influences upon infant and child feeding practices.

·         Explore the nature of relationships within families in connection with various types of nutritive and nurturing behaviour in infancy and childhood.

·         Increase understandings of breastfeeding as a bio-psychosocial activity.

·         Enhance understanding of the complex interactions between socio-cultural, psychological and biological factors in infant and child feeding, eating and nutrition.

·         Focus on key initiatives that may impact upon practices related to infant and child feeding, eating and nutrition.

 

Key Note Speakers:         

 

Richmond Aryeetey PhD, MPH. Senior Lecturer, PI for Becoming Breastfeeding Friendly (BBF) Process in Ghana, University of Ghana

 

Anna Byrom RM, BSc, MSc, Senior Lecturer, MAINN, School of Community health and Midwifery, UCLAN.

 

Rukhsana Haider MBBS, MSc, IBCLC, PhD.  Chair, Training & Assistance for Health & Nutrition Foundation, Bangladesh

 

Mary Renfrew PhD, RM, FRSE.  Professor of Mother and Infant Health, Mother and Infant Research Unit, School of Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Dundee

 

Daniel Sellen, PhD.  Distinguished Professor of Anthropology and Global Health, Director, The Joannah and Brian Lawson Centre for Child Nutrition, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto

 

Cecilia Tomori PhD, Assistant Professor in Anthropology, Parent-Infant Sleep Lab, Durham University

 

 

Location:  The conference venue is The Grange Hotel, Grange Over Sands, which is situated on the fringe of the Lake District in beautiful surroundings.  For details on the charms of this stylish location visit the hotel website http://www.grange-hotel.co.uk/

 

Conference Booking and Enquiries  

All presenters will be required to register for the conference and pay the fee £400 for the three days, non-residential.  A day rate of £135 is also available.  There is no VAT applicable on the conference fee.

For conference enquiries please email the Events Team [log in to unmask]

Or Tel: +44 (0)1772 892650  

 

For academic enquiries please contact Professor Fiona Dykes on [log in to unmask]

 

For enquiries regarding publishing your abstract in Maternal and Child Nutrition, please contact Dr Victoria Hall Moran on [log in to unmask]

 

Day 1:  Monday 10th June 2019

 

08.00- 09.00         Conference registration and refreshments

 

09.00- 09.15         Opening address: Professor Nigel Harrison, Executive Dean

 

09.15-09.30          Welcome by Conference Convenor: Professor Fiona Dykes, MAINN, UCLan

 

09.30 – 10.20       Keynote: Mary Renfrew PhD, RM, FRSE - Infant feeding, nurturing, and attachment – the long view

 

 

10.30-11.00          Concurrent Session: 1

Room A (large): Relton C, Lam W, Suen R, Oriyomi Adebowale M, Henderson S (England) Are legislative and fiscal measures required to create a strong UK breastfeeding culture? 

Room B:               Jeni Stevens (Australia) Re-lactating or inducing lactation without birthing             

Room C:               Mahon BP, Cassidy TM (Ireland) Immunological attributes of breastmilk are retained during storage.

Room D:               O’Sullivan E, Pawlak K, Głębowska A, Kearney JM (Ireland) A qualitative exploration of the attitudes and experiences of Polish breastfeeding mothers in Ireland.

Room E:                Horii N (France) What determined postpartum breastfeeding practices in rural Niger? –Action research of Family and Community based Child healthcare Promotion –

 

 

11.00-11.30          Refreshments

 

 

11.30-12.00          Concurrent Session: 2

Room A (large):  Grundt H, Silnes Tandberg B, Flacking F, Moen A, Drageset J. (Norway/Sweden) Lactation and Breastfeeding in the Single Family Room, Neonatal Intensive Care Unit.

Room B:               Grimes H, Forster D, McLachlan H, Shafiei T (Australia) Volunteers’ experiences of providing breastfeeding peer support in the ‘Ringing Up about Breastfeeding’ (RUBY) randomised controlled trial   

Room C:               McMullen S, Bhavnani V, Fox R (England) Strengthening and Expanding NCT Breastfeeding Support Services for Families.

Room D:               Cindy Turner-Maffei (USA) Stunted Futures: Complementary feeding guidance gaps in the Unites States endanger nutrition and health of infants and young children.

Room E:                Pries AM, Rehman AM, Filteau S, Sharma N, Upadhyay A, Ferguson EL (Nepal/USA/England) Unhealthy snack food/beverage consumption is associated with poor diet quality among 12-23 month-olds in Kathmandu Valley, Nepal.

 

 

12.10-12.40          Concurrent Session: 3

Room A (large):  Silnes Tandberg B, Frey Frøslie K, Markestad T, Flacking R, Grundt H, Moen A (Norway/Swede)    How does Single Family Room design impact on preterm infants’ growth?               

Room B                 Mozafarinia M, Feeley N, Van Hulst A, Héon M; McQueen K, Semenic S (Canada) A comprehensive review of the literature on determinants of breastfeeding outcomes post-NICU discharge among mothers of preterm infants: An application of Bandura’s social cognitive theory.

Room C:               Finch G, Faulkner Z (England) IBCLC an undervalued credential: an overview of reported barriers in practice and in the workplace by International Board Certified Lactation Consultants in Great Britain.

Room D:               Leahy-Warren P, Mulcahy H, O’Connor M (Ireland) Breastfeeding education for student Public Health Nurses: Integrating theory and practice.

Room E:                Chang Yan-Shing, Bick D (England) Supporting overweight and obese women to breastfeed using Experience-Based Co-Design: Women’s experiences and perspectives.

 

 

12.40-13.50          Lunch, networking and exhibitors

 

                               


13.50-14.40          Keynote: Richmond Aryeetey PhD, MPH – Scaling up evidence-informed action in Breastfeeding: Experiences and Lessons from Ghana

 

 

14.50-15.20          Concurrent Session: 4

Room A (large):  Francis J, Mildon A, Stewart S, Underhill B, Tarasuk V, Di Ruggiero E, Sellen D, O’Connor DL (Canada) Qualitative inquiry exploring vulnerable women’s experiences with breastfeeding and a community infant feeding program.

Room B:               Dowling S and Cooper T (England)  What do we know from current evidence about the experience of women who breastfeed beyond twelve months of age? A qualitative evidence synthesis.

Room C:               Brimdyr K, Cadwell K (USA) A plausible causal relationship between the increased use of fentanyl as an obstetric analgesic and the current opioid epidemic in the US.

Room D:               Semenic S, Aita M, Larone-Juneau A (Canada) Enhancing nutrition and nurturing of preterm infants through a community of practice among NICU nurse leaders: the [log in to unmask]

Room E:               Kulkarni S, Fronngillo  EA,  Cunningham K, Moore S, Blake C (USA/Nepal) Exposure to nutrition information as a linking mechanism between women’s intra-household bargaining power and infant and young child feeding practices in Nepal.

 

 

15.20-15.50          Refreshments

 

 

15.50-16.20          Concurrent session 5

Room A (large):   Ball HL, Douglas P, Taylor C, Thomas V (England) Sleep, Baby & You: a new intervention for UK parents who are seeking support with infant sleep.

Room B:                 Piiparinen H, Taittonen L, Melender H-L (Finland) Father’s experiences of the newborn life support for their baby at delivery room

Room C:                Appleton J, Fowler C, Russell CG, Laws R, Denney-Wilson E (Australia) Infant formula feeding and sources of advice and support in the context of rapid weight gain, a mixed methods study

Room D:                Azhar A, Cardoso A, Nickel N, Merewood A(USA) Infant feeding among refugees in greater Athens, Greece: 2017-18

Room E                  Fuller AB, Byrne RA Golley RK Trost SG (Aus) Parental self-efficacy, attitudes and beliefs around non-responsive feeding practices: findings from focus groups with mothers.

 

 

16.30-17.00          Concurrent session 6

Room A (large):  McFadden A, Siebelt L, Gavine A, Symon A, Marshall J, Girard L-C, MacGillivray S (Scotland) Counselling interventions to enable women to initiate and continue breastfeeding: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Room B:               Blair A, Cadwell K, Turner-Maffei C, Lessons Learned: Instilling maternal self-confidence in order to improve breastfeeding outcomes.

Room C:                Haiek L, Semenic S, Maastrup R (Canada) Benchmarking indicators for breastfeeding protection and support in neonatal wards at the local, national and international levels: An example from Quebec, Canada. 

Room D:                Stevens J (Australia) Maternal satisfaction after a Caesarean.

Room E:                 Pandey Rana P, Cunningham K (Nepal) Child, adolescent and maternal nutrition programming: using evidence to design and improve quality of interventions in Nepal.

 

 

18.00-20.00          Editorial board meeting – Maternal and Child Nutrition – Editorial board members

 

 

 


Day 2: Tuesday 11th June 2019

 

08.30- 09.00         Registration and refreshments

 

09.00- 09.10         Welcome by Chair: Renée Flacking

 

09.10-10.00          Keynote: Daniel Sellen, PhD (presentation title TBC)

 

 

10.10-10.40          Concurrent Session: 1

Room A (large):  Clarke J, Ingram J, Johnson D, Thomson G, Trickey H, Dombrowski S, MacArthur C, Dykes F, Sitch A, Roberts T, Feltham M, Hoddinott P, Jolly K (England) The Assets-based infant feeding help Before and After birth (ABA) intervention for improving breastfeeding initiation and continuation: feasibility study results.   

Room B:               Cassidy T, Mahon B, Dykes F (Ireland/England) Building Liquid Bridges: Donor Human Milk, Maternal Lifestyle Choices, and Transdisciplinary Research.

Room C:               Jonsdottir R, Flacking R (Iceland/Sweden) Breastfeeding late preterm infants – patterns, behaviour, and perceived difficulties up to one month of age. 

Room D:               Horii N (France) What determined postpartum breastfeeding practices in rural Niger? –Action research of Family and Community based Child healthcare Promotion.

Room E:                Borg B (Cambodia/Aus) Does a Locally-Produced Ready-to-Use Supplementary Food (RUSF) Prevent Undernutrition in Cambodian Children aged 6 – 17 months?

Room F:                Keegan A, Ball H (England) Birth Centres: To what extent do they support evolutionary-informed postnatal care?

 

 

10.40-11.10          Refreshments

 

 

11.10-11.40          Concurrent Session: 2

Room A (large):  Ingram J, Johnson D, Clarke J, Thomson G, Trickey H, Hoddinott P, Jolly K on behalf of the ABA study team (England) Experiences of an assets-based peer support intervention for increasing breastfeeding initiation and continuation.

Room B:               Gubert MB, Buccini GS, Barreto ME (Brazil) Early childhood development friendly index: assessing the enabling environment for Nurturing Care in Brazilian municipalities.

Room C:               Hocking J, Liamputtong P, Schmied V (Australia) ‘It’s more than the plumbing’: how women receive breastfeeding support from Lactation Consultants in Melbourne, Australia.

Room D:               Garcia A, Looby S, McLean-Guthrie2 K,  Parrett A (Scotland) An exploration of complementary feeding practices in North Lanarkshire, Scotland: where do parents source information and what do they need?

Room E:                Whittaker K, Olive P, Richards L, Timol S, Dickenson R, Gupta R (England) NEST@home: The Neonatal Early Supported Transfer home project.

Room F:                Swanson V, Maltinsky W    (Scotland/Ethiopia) Lost in Translation? Changing Maternal Nutritional Behaviour in Ethiopia.

 

11.50-12.20          Concurrent Session: 3

Room A (large):  Thomson G, Clarke J, Johnson D, Ingram J, Trickey H, Jolly K on behalf of the ABA study team (England) Women’s and helpers’ experiences of an assets-based resource – an Infant Feeding Genogram - to promote breastfeeding initiation and continuation.

Room B:               Stewart K, O’Connor B (USA) ‘If Your Breasts Could Talk’ (Drama)

Room C:               Schmied V, Jefferies D (Aus) Tackling maternal anxiety in the perinatal period: Reconceptualising Mothering Narratives

Room D:               Garcia AL, Brown E,McLachlan M, Parrett A (Scotland) Can cooking with children help reduce food fussiness and increase willingness to try green vegetables? An evaluation of the “Big Chef Little Chef” programme.

Room E:                Hannula L, Swanson V (Finland/Scotland) Being a parent - breastfeeding, stress and support: A comparative survey of mothers of children under 2 in the UK and Finland.

 

                                                                                                                               

12.20-13.30          Lunch, networking and exhibitors

 

 


13.30-14.20          Keynote: Rukhsana Haider - A peer counselling intervention can empower factory workers to breastfeed exclusively in Bangladesh

 

 

14.30-15.00          Concurrent Session: 4

Room A (large):  Raftery B, Tosh K, Siebelt L, Johnson E, Wallace L, MacGillivray S, McGuire B, Mactier H, Donnan P, Culshaw L, McFadden A (Scotland)  Developing a complex intervention to assess the feasibility of Cue-based feeding for preterm infants in neonatal units (CuBS).

Room B:               Schmöker A, Flacking R, Udo C, Ericson J (Sweden) Experienced parental stress and potential predictors up until the preterm infant’s age of 12 months.

Room C:               Chowdhury M, Alam A, Raynes-Greenow C, Dibley MJ (Bangladesh/Australia) A qualitative study to understand the barriers and coping strategies to comply with balanced plate nutrition education in rural Bangladesh.

Room D:               Twells L, Alkusayer N, Midodzi W, Taylor A, Allwood Newhook LA, (Canada) Assessing Changes in Infant Feeding Attitudes from Prenatal through to the Postpartum Year.

Room E:                Marshall S, Taki S, Love P, Kearney M, Wen Li Ming, Rissel C (Australia) Infant feeding among culturally and linguistically diverse populations: experiences of Arabic and Chinese migrant mothers in Sydney, Australia.

 

 

15.00-15.30          Refreshments

 

 

15.30 -16.00         Concurrent Session: 5

Room A (large):  Brown A, Fisher S, Jones   W (England) A lifeline when no one else wants to give you an answer – the evaluation of the Breastfeeding Network drugs in breastmilk service.

Room B:               Wallis-Redworth M, Thomson G, Hall Moran V (England) Healthcare practitioner confidence and self-efficacy in providing breastfeeding / breast-milk feeding support to fathers: a grounded theory study.

Room C:               Alam A, Khatun W, Ara G, Khanam M, Bokshi A, Li M, Dibley MJ (Bangladesh/Aus) A mixed-methods feasibility assessment of integrating agriculture and nutrition behaviour change intervention with financial incentive to improve infant feeding in rural Bangladesh.

Room D:               Taylor A, Nguyen HV, Gao Z, Allwood Newhook LA, Twells L (Canada) Differences in Self-Reported and Administrative Data on Health Care Services Use in Infant’s During the First year of life in the Eastern Health Region of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Room E:                Prasad Ryoko R, Williamson R, Sparling T, Ferguson E, Cunningham K (Nepal) Parental depression and child nutritional status in Nepal.

Room F:                Khalid M, Osman F, Dykes F, Erlandsson K (Somalia/Sweden/UK) Infant and young child nutritional situation in internally displaced people communities, Somalia. A questionnaire survey of caregivers of children aged 6 to 59 months.

 

 

16.10-16.40          Concurrent Session: 6

Room A (large):   Cadwell K, Brimdyr K (USA) The Untoward Physiologic Effects of the Use of Synthetic Oxytocin on both Mother and Infant      USA.

Room B:               Rinaldi AEM, Ferreira CM, Lamounier DMB, Santos MN, Azeredo CM, Conde WL  (Brazil) Secular trends of breastfeeding indicators in South and East Asia from 1990s to 2010s: data from Demographic Health Survey.  

Room C:               D’Almeida M, Dhurde V, Bhaise S, Thanh T, Patel A, Alam A, Dibley MJ, Muthayya S (Australia) Electronic assessment techniques of infant diet for the M-SAKHI study– an innovation of individual level dietary assessments in rural and low-resource settings.

Room D:               Taylor A, Nguyen HV, Gao Z, Chowdhury S, Allwood Newhook LA, Twells L (Canada) Infant feeding mode and its impact on health services use in infants during the first year of life in the Eastern Health Region of Newfoundland and Labrador. l

Room E                 Lyons S, Smith DM, Currie S, Peters S, Lavender T (England) Breastfeeding in women with a BMI ≥30kg/m2: a co-produced workbook to support initiation and maintenance.

Room F                 Stone C (England) Osteopathy, breastfeeding and lactation support – a role in need of clarification and evidence.

 

 

16.50-17.30          Poster viewing session (presenters will be there to answer questions) - see separate poster list

 

19.00                      Wine reception

 

19.30                      Conference Dinner (optional)

 

 


Day 3: Wednesday 12th June 2019

 

08.30-09.00          Registration and refreshments

 

09.00- 09.10         Welcome by Chair: Professor Virginia Schmied

 

09.10-10.00:         Keynote: Anna Byrom - BFHI sense of coherence: leading, performing and receiving infant feeding care in a ‘fast-food’ service.

 

 

10.10-10.40          Concurrent Session: 1

Room A (large):  Merewood A, Burnham L, Bugg K, Krane K, Knapp R, Beliveau P, Feldman-Winter L (USA) CHAMPions of Change: Mississippi and the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative.

Room B:               Dalsgaard BT, Rodrigo-Domingo M, Kronborg H, Haslund H (Denmark)  Breastfeeding and skin-to-skin contact as non-pharmacological prevention of neonatal hypoglycaemia in infants born to women with gestational diabetes; a Danish quasi-experimental study.

Room C:               Papain S, Perera N (England) The Baby Buddy app: Tackling inequalities in breastfeeding in the UK – using a cultural lens. 

Room D:               White M, Symon A, McFadden A (Scotland) "The invisible wall: Supporting immediate, uninterrupted mother-infant skin to skin care during elective caesarean sections".

Room E:                Burns E, Triandafilidis Z (Australia) Creating Breastfeeding Friendly Environments.

Room F:                Kuswara K, Campbell KJ, Hesketh KD, Zheng M, Laws RA (Australia) Breastfeeding practices and predictors in Chinese Australian mothers. 

                               

 

10.40-11.10          Refreshments

 

 

11.10-11.40          Concurrent Session: 2

Room A (large):  Maastrup R, Haiek LN (Denmark/Canada) and the Neo-BFHI Survey Group. Closeness and separation in neonatal wards from 36 countries: Results from the Neo-BFHI survey.

Room B:               Vij V, Brewer BK, Crossley R, Kauer I (USA/Netherlands) Compliance status of baby food product labels to the World Health Organization’s Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes and National Regulations in five countries (Indonesia, Vietnam, India, Thailand, and Nigeria).

Room C:               Blair A, Cadwell K, Turner-Maffei C, Brimdyr K (USA) Calculating the Carbon Footprint of Infant Formula in North America.

Room D:               Woollard F (England) The Justification Trap and Perceived Pressure to Breastfeed: obstacles to helping women meet their infant feeding goals. 

Room E:                Shukri NHM, Wells JCK and Fewtrell M (Malaysia/England) Experimental study on mother-infant signalling during breastfeeding: biological and psychological aspects.

Room F:                Mwangome M (Kenya) Individualized breastfeeding support for acutely ill malnourished infants under 6 months old.

                               

 

11.50-12.20          Concurrent Session: 3

Room A (large):  Cadwell K, Blair A, Turner-Maffei C, Brimdyr K (USA) Application of the WBTi to U.S. States and Territories- are parts better than the whole?

Room B:               Vij V, Brewer BK, Crossley R, Kauer I (USA/Netherlands) Evolving media monitoring methodology to assess baby food manufacturers’ compliance with the WHO’s International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes.

Room C:               Devenish G, Scott J, Begley A, Spencer J, Thomson M, Ha D, Do L (Aus/NZ) Does sustained breastfeeding cause early childhood caries?

Room D:               Hunt F, O’Connell R, Leahy-Warren P (Ireland) Grandmother/Mother Dyad Experiences of Breastfeeding

Room E:               Hunt L, Thomson G, Whittaker K, Dykes F (England)   Engagement with the health inequalities agenda: How have UK third sector breastfeeding support organisations developed their services for delivery in areas of socio-economic deprivation?

Room F:                Kirkwood E, Alam A, Dibley MJ, Cash S (Australia) How does a combined nutrition counselling and cash transfer intervention impact women and their level of empowerment in rural Bangladesh?

 

 

12.20-13.30          Lunch, networking and exhibitors

                               


13.30-14.20          Keynote: Cecilia Tomori PhD - The power of culture in breastfeeding and sleep: from fragmentation to reintegration.

 

14.30-15.00          Concurrent Session: 4

Room A (large): Ayton J, Hansen E, Tesch L, Bleech L, Burke E (Tasmania) Broken Bodies: Sharing women and men’s everyday breastfeeding experiences through creative art works; an ethnomethodological approach using an arts health lens. 

Room B:               Stevens J (Australia) Antenatal breastfeeding education – what women access

Room C:               O’Connor M, Leahy-Warren P (Ireland) Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy and Skin-to-Skin Contact among First Time Mothers.

Room D:               Simmons M (Aus) In the 'NIC' of time: Does Breastfeeding education increase staff confidence in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU) environment?  

Room E:               Cunningham K, Neupane G, Pries A, Erichsen D, Manohar S (Nepal) Adolescent girls’ health and nutrition behaviours and nutritional status: variation across sub-populations in Nepal 

Room F:                Rebecca Byrne, Elena Jansen (Australia) Measuring parental feeding practices in infancy and toddlerhood: understanding how parents interpret the questions we ask.

 

 

15.00-15.30          Refreshments

 

 

15.30 -16.30         Final Presentation: Kajsa Brimdyr and Karin Cadwell (USA) Skin-to-skin contact immediately after birth: examining the importance and mapping the process.           

 

16.30-17.00          Thanks and close of conference: Professor Fiona Dykes (conference convenor)

 

Details will be announced by Professor Anna Axelin regarding the 2020 MAINN Conference.

This will be held from 9th-11th June 2020 at Turku University, Finland.

 

This will be a collaboration between:

·         MAINN, UCLAN

·         Reproductive, Infant and Child Health Centre (RICH) led by Professor Renée Flacking, Dalarna University, Sweden

·         Separation and Closeness Experiences in the Neonatal Environment Group (SCENE) led by Professor Anna Axelin at Turku University, Finland. 

 

The SCENE symposium will follow on 12th June 2020, at Turku University.  All enquiries to Professor Anna Axelin at [log in to unmask]

 

 

 

 


POSTERS – Day 2: Tuesday 11th June 2019

 

 

Authors

 

 

 

Title of poster

 

Country of author(s)

Ingram J

Copeland M

Johnson D

Emond A

Development and impact of Bristol breastfeeding and tongue-tie assessment tools

England

Busck-Rasmussen M

Breastfeeding Practices in Relation to Country of Origin Among Women Living in Denmark: A Population-Based Study

 

Denmark

Breili C

Eriksson M

Flacking R

Support to parents during and after discharge from Swedish neonatal units

Sweden

Buckle H

Barry S

Roebothan B

Factors Associated with Exclusive Breastfeeding vs. Supplemented Feeding in Women who reported an Intention to Exclusively Breastfeed in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada

 

Canada

Nilsson I

Determinants of Early Negative Breastfeeding Experiences and Low Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy One Week Following Birth

 

Denmark

Dib S

Fewtrell M

Wells J

Husna N

Shukri M

 

The Influence of Hospital Practices and Family Support on Breastfeeding Duration, Adverse Events, and Postnatal Depression among First-Time Mothers in Malaysia

 

England

Dib S

Wells J

Fewtrell M

 

Mother and late Preterm Lactation Study (MAPLeS): A Randomised Controlled Trial Testing the Use of a Breastfeeding Meditation by Mothers of Late Preterm Infants on Maternal Psychological State, Breast Milk Composition and Volume, and Infant Behaviour and Growth

 

England

Yu J

Wells J

Wei Z

Fewtrell M

The effects of relaxation therapy on maternal psychological states, infant growth and behaviours and gut microbiome: A randomised controlled trial investigating the mother-infant signalling during breastfeeding following late preterm delivery

 

 

England

Baines J

An Integrated Infant Feeding Service Model for Manchester – a cohesive approach

 

England

Takács L

Bartoš F

Čepický P

 

 

The effects of intrapartum synthetic oxytocin on breastfeeding in the first nine months postpartum: findings from a longitudinal prospective study

Czech Republic

Gurney JM

Khan A

Shum C,

Garcia AL

Chambers S

Wright C

Developing a measure of eating behaviour in preschool children applicable worldwide  

Scotland

Alyahya W

Simpson J

Garcia AL

Mactier H

Edwards CA

Volumes of initiating human milk fortification in very low birth weight preterm infants: a systematic review

Scotland

Rinaldi AEM

Ferreira CS

Lamounier DMB

Santos MN

Azeredo CM

Conde WL

Trends of prevalence and duration of breastfeeding in Latin America from 1990s to 2010s: data from Demographic Health Survey (DHS)

Brazil

Hannula L

Meretoja R

Parents’ experiences of reflexology massage for infants with colic - A pilot study

               

Finland

 

Brewer BK

Andrzejewski C

Vij V

Crossley R

Kauer I

 

 

Methodology, Results and Challenges in the assessment of baby food manufacturing companies’ compliance with the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes and relevant national regulations in five countries       

 

 

 

 

 

USA/Netherlands

Barry S,

Buckle H,

Roebothan B

 

A preliminary study to investigate the potential exposure of mothers to violations of the WHO International Code of marketing of breast-milk substitutes in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

Canada

Wesołowska A

Barbarska O

Bzikowska A

 

Biological, sociological and demographic factors associated with value of milk donated to Regional Milk Bank in Warsaw Poland          

 

Poland

Justine Gallagher

‘Avoiding breastfeeding in public: ‘Invisible Breastfeeding’ in an area with low breastfeeding rates.

 

               

England

Galipeau R

Lemire L

                              

Mother’s experiences of inconsistent advice in breastfeeding support

Canada

Alasmari S

Akparibo R

Relton C

A review of the literature on breastfeeding in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries

 

 

UK

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fiona Dykes PhD, MA, RM, ADM, FHEA

Professor of Maternal and Infant Health,

Maternal and Infant Nutrition and Nurture Unit (MAINN),

School of Community Health and Midwifery,

University of Central Lancashire, Preston,

Lancashire, PR1 2HE

 

Email: [log in to unmask]

http://www.uclan.ac.uk/staff_profiles/fiona_dykes.php

Tel: +44(0)1772 893828

 

Next MAINN Conference - 10th, 11th , 12th  June 2019. 

Call for abstracts info on: 

https://www.uclan.ac.uk/venue-hire/nutrition-nurture-Infancy-childhood-perspectives.php

 

Celebrating 190 Years
University of Central Lancashire
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