Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1085556 Midwifery 2006 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryObjectiveto analyse baby-feeding information needs and seeking described by Canadian women pregnant with twins.Designqualitative; data were collected by in-depth semi-structured interviews. Transcripts provided the data for discourse analysis of the use of two interpretative repertoires.SettingOntario, Canada.Participants19 women pregnant with twins.Measurements and findingsthe first interpretative repertoire represented caring for twins as fundamentally distinct from caring for singly born babies, and therefore emphasised the commonality of mothers of twins regardless of their background or situation. The second highlighted the uniqueness and individuality of each person. These repertoires intersect with discourses of baby feeding and good mothering, resulting in a complex discursive interplay of similarity and difference, commonality and individuality, information seeking, baby feeding and good mothering. Participants used the two interpretative repertoires to (1) frame information needs; (2) construct complex accounts of the biomedical, experiential and personalised authority of information sources; (3) describe the helpfulness of information sources independent of their authority; and (4) describe the barriers encountered in the finding appropriate sources of baby-feeding information in pregnancy.Implicationsunderstanding and respecting the discursive constructions of pregnancy and mothering can help practitioners understand the complex discursive interplay underlying participants’ baby-feeding decisions, and may facilitate more sensitive support for women's individual needs and understandings.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Obstetrics, Gynecology and Women's Health
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