Commercial milk formula marketing entry points: setting the course of infant and young child feeding trajectories
Vilar-Compte M, Hernández-Cordero S, Pérez-Escamilla R, Tomori C. Commercial milk formula marketing entry points: setting the course of infant and young child feeding trajectories. BMC Public Health 2024, 24: 2653. PMID: 39342250, PMCID: PMC11438275, DOI: 10.1186/s12889-024-19997-3.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBreast FeedingChild, PreschoolFemaleHumansInfantInfant FormulaInfant, NewbornMarketingMexicoQualitative ResearchYoung AdultConceptsSocioecological modelHealth professionalsCommercial milk formulaHealth care providersHealth care systemYoung child feedingCare providersCommercial determinantsCare systemChild feedingSocioeconomic statusHealth institutionsBreastfeeding decisionsQualitative studyLack trainingIYCFInfant feedingLife course phaseHealthSocietal levelBreastfeedingProfessionalsCounseling systemCourse phaseSocial normsBreastfeeding among women employed in Mexico’s informal sector: strategies to overcome key barriers
Goodman J, Lara-Mejía V, Hernández-Cordero S, Vilar-Compte M. Breastfeeding among women employed in Mexico’s informal sector: strategies to overcome key barriers. International Journal For Equity In Health 2024, 23: 144. PMID: 39044248, PMCID: PMC11264414, DOI: 10.1186/s12939-024-02147-x.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultBreast FeedingEmploymentFemaleHumansInformal SectorInterviews as TopicMexicoQualitative ResearchWomen, WorkingConceptsInformal employmentInformal sectorSocial protection programsWorking conditions of womenCondition of womenShort-term policiesSocial protectionEconomic vulnerabilityQualitative thematic analysisInformal workersMaternity leaveRespondents expressed concernsPotential policiesGovernment agenciesPolicyEmploymentThematic analysisMaternal protectionLabor protectionLonger-term solutionsProtection programsInternational organizationsLegal equivalentRelevant programsBreastfeeding