Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-10T21:05:33.729Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Breast-feeding practice in Norway 1860–1984

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  31 July 2008

Knut Liestøl
Affiliation:
Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway
Margit Rosenberg*
Affiliation:
Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway
Lars Walløe
Affiliation:
Department of Informatics, University of Oslo, Norway
*
* Correspondence to Dr. Rosenberg.

Summary

Data from birth records with information on previously born children from three maternity hospitals in Norway have been used to study the trend in breast-feeding practice from 1860 to 1984. During the whole period, the percentage of women breast-feeding for at least 1 week was remarkably high, above 90%. The results show a fairly stable duration of breast-feeding up until 1920, at least 3 months in approximately 80% of the women. After that year, the distribution of the duration of breast-feeding changed dramatically. The shortest durations were found in the late 1960s, when only about 30% lactated for 3 months or more. The duration then increased quickly, so that at the beginning of the 1980s about 80% of the women were again breast-feeding for at least 3 months.

By multiple regression methods, the relationships of several independent variables to the duration of breast-feeding were investigated. Married women lactated for 1·5–3 months longer than unmarried, the difference being largest before 1920. First-born children were breast-fed for a little shorter time than second and later-born children. Until World War II women of lowest social strata had the longest durations of breast-feeding, and then the situation was reversed, women of highest social strata continuing the longest.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Arnfinsen, A. (1917) Omsorg for spædbarn. Sildraapen's årsberetning for 1917. Trondheim.Google Scholar
Årstad, B. H. (1981) Nye barselrutiner og amming. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 101, 319.Google Scholar
Biering-Sørensen, F., Hilden, J. & Biering-Sørensen, K. (1980) Breast-feeding in Copenhagen 1938–1977. Dan. med. Bull. 27, 42.Google Scholar
Boulton, T. J. C. & Flavel, S. E. (1978) The relationship of perinatal factors to breast feeding. Aust. paediat. J. 14, 169.Google ScholarPubMed
Broch, O. J. (1878) Le Royaume de Norvege et le Peuple Norvegien. Christiania.Google Scholar
Clavano, N. R. (1982) Mode of feeding and its effect on infant mortality and morbidity. J trop. Pediat. Envir. Child Hlth, 28, 287.Google Scholar
Coles, E. C., Cotter, S. & Valman, H. B. (1978) Increasing prevalence of breast-feeding. Br. med. J. 2, 1122.Google Scholar
Cox, D. R. (1972) Regression models and life tables (with discussion). J. R. Statist. Soc. B34, 187.Google Scholar
De Chateau, P., Holmberg, H., Jakobsson, K. & Winberg, J. (1977) A study of factors promoting and inhibiting lactation. Devel. Med. Child Neurol. 19, 575.Google Scholar
Dixon, W. J. (ed.) (1981) BMDP Statistical Software. University of California Press, Berkeley.Google Scholar
Eastham, E., Smith, D., Poole, D. & Neligan, G. (1976) Further decline of breast-feeding. Br. med. J. 1, 305.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Eggan, G. & Torp, K. H. (1976) Faktorer som influerer på brysternæring. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 96, 569.Google Scholar
Endsjø, T. & Engeseth, R. (1973) Spedbarnernæring. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 93, 693.Google Scholar
Faye, F. G. (1847) Om Fødselsstiftelsen i Christiania fra dens begyndelse i Aaret 1818 til Udgangen af 1846. Norsk Magazin for Lægevidenskaben, 1, 281.Google Scholar
Frengen, R. & Joner, G. (1976) En undersøkelse om amming. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 96, 577.Google Scholar
Greve, M. (1895) Mor og Barn. Aschehoug, Kristiania.Google Scholar
Groth, A. & Hahn, M. (1910) Die Sauglingsverhaltnisse in Bayern. Zeitschrift des bayerischen statistischen Landesamtes.Google Scholar
Hirschman, C. & Butler, M. (1981) Trends and differentials in breast-feeding: an update. Demography, 18, 39.Google Scholar
Hofvander, Y. & Sjølin, S. (1979) Breast feeding trends and recent information activities in Sweden. Acta paediat. scand. Suppl. 275, 124.Google ScholarPubMed
Jelliffe, D. B. & Jelliffe, E. F. P. (1978) Human Milk in the Modern World. Oxford University Press, Oxford.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johannessen, A. (1915) Om Spædbarnets Ernæring og Stel. Ved direktøren for det civile medicin alvaesen. Christiania.Google Scholar
Kåss, A. (1968) Diegivningsevnen hos nåtidens mødre. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 88, 939.Google Scholar
Kjæernes, U. (1983) Ammesituasjonen i Norge. Report to the Norwegian Ministry of Social Affairs, Oslo, Norway.Google Scholar
Knodel, J. & Van De Walle, E. (1967) Breast feeding, fertility and infant mortality: an analysis of some early German data. Popul. Stud. 21, 109.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kreyberg, A. (1916) Spædbarnets ernæring og pleie. Kort veiledning for mødre. Arbeidets trykkeri, Bergen.Google Scholar
Lichtenberg, S. M. (1977) Laktasjon. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 97, 514.Google Scholar
Lithell, U. B. (1981) Breast-feeding and Reproduction. Studies in Marital Fertility and Infant Mortality in 19th Century Finland and Sweden. PhD thesis, University of Uppsala.Google Scholar
Løken, O. (1903) Barnestell, en Liden Bog for Unge Modre. Kristiania.Google Scholar
Martinez, G. A. & Nalezienski, J. P. (1981) 1980 update: the recent trend in breast-feeding. Pediatrics, 67, 260.Google Scholar
McCann, M. F., Liskin, L. S., Piotrow, P. T., Rinehart, W. & Fox, G. (1981) Breast-feeding, Fertility and Family Planning. Population Reports, Series J, No. 24. Population Information Program, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore.Google Scholar
McNally, E., Hendricks, S. & Horowitz, I. (1985) A look at breast-feeding trends in Canada (1963–1982). Can. J. publ. Hlth, 76, 101.Google Scholar
Nesheim, B. I. (1978) Amming. In: Seksualitet, Familieplanlegging og Prevensjon i Norge. Edited by Walløe, L.. Universitetsforlaget, Oslo.Google Scholar
Nilsson, D. & Hansen, T. I. (1980) Rutiner ved barselavdelingen og deres innvirkning på varigheten av amming. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 100, 206.Google Scholar
Page, J. A. (1971) A survey of breast-feeding. Practitioner, 207, 74.Google Scholar
Reichborn-Kjennerud, I. (1933) Vår Gamle Trolldomsmedisin 2. Skrifter utgitt av Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi i Oslo II. Hist. Filos. Klasse nr. 2, Oslo.Google Scholar
Rom, A. K. (1981) Ammefrekvensen i Tromsø. Tidsskr. Nor. Lægeforen. 101, 1507.Google Scholar
Spence, J. C. (1938) The modern decline of breast-feeding. Br. med. J. 2, 729.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toverud, K. U. (1945) Beretning om de Første 6 Års Arbeid ved Oslo Kommunes Helsestasjon for Mor og Barn på Sagene (19391944). Fabritius & Sønner, Oslo.Google Scholar
Treuhertz, J., Cullinan, T. R. & Saunders, D. I. (1982) Determinants of infant-feeding practice in East London. Hum. Nutr. Appl. Nutr. 36A, 281.Google Scholar
Weiser-Aall, L. (1976) Omkring lengden på dieperioden ifølge nyere norske opptegnelser. Fataburen, 71, 221.Google Scholar
West, C. P. (1980) Factors influencing the duration of breast-feeding. J. biosoc. Sci. 12, 325.Google Scholar