Mother-child communication during natural and artificial feeding in the aids age

Authors

  • Simone Gonçalves Vasconcelos
  • Marli Teresinha Gimeniz Galvão
  • Simone de Sousa Paiva
  • Paulo César de Almeida
  • Lorita Marlena Freitag Pagliuca

Keywords:

Communication, Spatial Behavior, Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome, HIV, Breast Feeding

Abstract

When mothers with HIV breastfeed their children, this represents a risk factor to transmit the virus. Therefore, the exclusion of breastfeeding is recommended. Not breastfeeding can make communication between mother and child more difficult. A comparative study was carried out in the light of proxemic factors between mother and child during artificial feeding and breastfeeding among HIV-positive and negative women. At a rooming-in unit, 84 interactions between four mothers and their children were analyzed. Intimate distance prevails in 100% of the interactions, as well as the sitting posture. Babies of HIV-positive mothers remained active longer than vertically exposed babies. The quality of interactions over time and maternal responsiveness to the baby will probably determine repercussions of non-breastfeeding to the development of bonding between mother and child.

 

Published

2010-08-20

How to Cite

Vasconcelos, S. G., Galvão, M. T. G., Paiva, S. de S., Almeida, P. C. de, & Pagliuca, L. M. F. (2010). Mother-child communication during natural and artificial feeding in the aids age. Rev Rene, 11(4). Retrieved from http://www.periodicos.ufc.br/rene/article/view/4628

Issue

Section

Research Article

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