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Sociological Spectrum
Mid-South Sociological Association
Volume 36, 2016 - Issue 6
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Original Articles

Breastfeeding and employment: A propensity score matching approach

Pages 391-405 | Published online: 05 Oct 2016
 

ABSTRACT

It is well established within the scholarship on work and the family that many women experience difficulty juggling work and family responsibilities. Challenges to breastfeeding after giving birth are a specific manifestation of this work–family conflict. Many women report that they are unable to continue breastfeeding upon return to paid work. In this article, I analyze a subsample of 746 women from the United States Infant Feeding Practices Survey II to assess the effect of new mothers’ employment status and workplace characteristics on breastfeeding duration. This research reveals that new mothers who return to paid employment within three months of giving birth breastfeed an average of five fewer weeks than new mothers who do not return to paid work for three months or more. In addition, among mothers who return to paid work within three months, full-time workers breastfeed an average of more than 15 fewer weeks than part-time workers. These substantial differences in the duration of breastfeeding suggest that women face significant obstacles to combining paid work and mothering in the postpartum period.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Amanda Marie Lubold

Amanda Lubold is an assistant professor of sociology at Indiana State University. Her research interests focus on the intersection of public health, breastfeeding, and social policy.

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