Your Article Summary
High Pregnancy-Related Anxiety and Prenatal Depressive Symptoms as Predictors of Intention to Breastfeed and Breastfeeding Initiation
Journal of Women's Health, 06/30/09
Fairlie TG et al. - In a healthcare setting highly supportive of breastfeeding, women with prenatal depressive symptoms and possibly those with high pregnancy-related anxiety were less likely to plan prenatally to breastfeed, although this tendency did not translate into lower breastfeeding initiation rates.
Related Articles
Intention to breastfeed and awareness of health recommendations: findings from first-time mothers in southwest Sydney, Australia
BMC Nursing, 10/22/09
Relevance Score: 65%
Intention to breastfeed and awareness of health recommendations: findings from first-time mothers in southwest Sydney, Australia
International Breastfeeding Journal, 10/19/09
Relevance Score: 65%
Maternal HIV-1 treatment protects against transmission to newborns
EurekAlert, 10/19/09
Relevance Score: 65%
Low-Income Women's Reproductive Weight Patterns: Empirically Based Clusters of Prepregnant, Gestational, and Postpartum Weights
Women's Health Issues, 11/04/09
Relevance Score: 64%
Infant Feeding and Maternal Metabolic Disease
The Female Patient, 10/08/09
Relevance Score: 64%
Today in Anxiety...keeping you current
Receive free subspecialty "5-minute updates" via email
Is pregnancy associated with mood and anxiety disorders? A cross-sectional study
General Hospital Psychiatry, 12/09/09
Current perspectives of the roles of the central norepinephrine system in anxiety and depression
Depression and Anxiety, 12/08/09
Suicidal thoughts and depressive feelings amongst Estonian schoolchildren: effect of family relationship and family structure
European Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, 12/08/09

See Latest Articles