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The resurgence of breastfeeding at the end of the second millennium
Anne L. Wright, Richard J. Schanler
Research output
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Contribution to journal
›
Article
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peer-review
83
Scopus citations
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Dive into the research topics of 'The resurgence of breastfeeding at the end of the second millennium'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Keyphrases
Breastfeeding Duration
100%
Breast
66%
Breastfeeding Initiation
66%
American Women
66%
Cultural Contexts
33%
Infection Risk
33%
Low-income
33%
Healthcare Professionals
33%
Labor Force
33%
Maternal Employment
33%
Feeding Preference
33%
Low-income Women
33%
Health Maintenance Organizations
33%
Federal Government
33%
Childbirth
33%
Promotional Effort
33%
American Academy of Pediatrics
33%
Flexible Working Hours
33%
Employed Women
33%
African American Women
33%
Supplemental Food
33%
International Policy
33%
Paid Maternity Leave
33%
Natural childbirth
33%
WIC Program
33%
Programmatic Change
33%
Family-friendly Workplace
33%
New Mothers
33%
Demographic Trends
33%
Lasting Effect
33%
Insurance Companies
33%
Breastfeeding Promotion
33%
National Policy
33%
Societal Pressure
33%
Institutional Cost
33%
Medicine and Dentistry
Breast Feeding
100%
Disease
50%
Health Care Cost
50%
Pediatrics
50%
Health Care Provider
50%
Infant Feeding
50%
Childbirth
50%
Workplace
50%
Obstetrics
50%
Natural Childbirth
50%
Nursing and Health Professions
Breast Feeding
100%
Health Care Personnel
50%
Disease
50%
Health Maintenance Organization
50%
Infant Feeding
50%
Workplace
50%
Natural Childbirth
50%
Psychology
Healthcare
100%
Cultural Contexts
100%
Workplace
100%