Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Breast Feeding / Benefits, Misconceptions & Challenges To Public Health. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 10 page paper that provides an overview of the findings in the current health literature related to the issue of breast feeding, reflects the benefits over bottle feeding, and then considers the implications of misconceptions and health issues for public health. Bibliography lists 16 sources.
Page Count:
10 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_Brfeed.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the duration of the breast-feeding have declined since the 1980s (Dermer, 1995). At the turn of the century, over 90 percent of women who bore healthy infants breast fed
their children, but this number sharply declined by 1960s following the advent of mass-produced formulas and the misconception that breast feeding was unsanitary and an inefficient way of feeding children;
by 1960, rates had declined to just 25% (Dermer, 1995). Though greater levels of public education about the benefits of breast feeding and support from the studies of a number
of health care professionals in the 1970s, breast-feeding rates peaked in 1984 at just 60% and have declined in the subsequent years, leveling off at 54% in 1992 (Dermer, 1995).
Over half of all women who do chose to breast-feed stop before their infants are six months old, suggesting that while numbers may have leveled off, the duration of
breast-feeding still demonstrates a problematic decline when considering the total picture (Dermer, 1995). Recognizing this problematic trend and the emerging medical evidence about the long-term impacts of breast
feeding, including reductions in Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS), improved immunological capabilities, reductions in respiratory ailments, and reductions in childhood obesity related to breast feeding that lasts after the six
month mark has led health professionals to consider the most effective approaches to encourage women to chose to breast-feed and supporting the increased duration of their participation in this choice
(Dermer, 1995). Health officials have recognized that breast feeding rates vary due to ethnicity, educational level, socioeconomic status, age, geographic region, and the timeliness of the birth (whether it
was planned or not), and have recognized that the lowest rates for breast-feeding are represented among young and uneducated mothers (Dermer, 1995) and by mothers with ethnic or social elements
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