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Home > Don't kill your baby: public health and the decline of breastfeeding in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries /

Don't kill your baby: public health and the decline of breastfeeding in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries /


Book Informaton

Don't kill your baby: public health and the decline of breastfeeding in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries /

Author

Wolf, Jacqueline H.

Series

Women and health

Year of Publication

[2001], ©2001.

Publisher

Ohio State University Press,

Pages

290

Language

en

ISBN

0814208770, 0814250777, 9780814250778

ARI Id

1675532612735


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Showing 1 to 11 of 11 entries
Chapters/HeadingsAuthor(s)PagesInfo
Chronology of Events in Infant Feeding History
1. "It Takes Quite a Little Courage to Stand Out": Mothers Move from Breast to Bottle
2. "Slaughter of the Innocents": Infant Mortality and the Urban Milk Supply
3. "They Cannot Transform Cows' Milk into Woman's Milk": Physicians and Infant Feeding
4. "Insist upon Breast Feeding": Public Health Organizations and Infant Feeding
5. "Mercenary Hirelings" or "A Great Blessing"?: Wet Nurses as Private and Institutional Employees
6. "Give It the Nearest Thing to Mother's Milk": Human Milk Substitutes
Epilogue: "A Matter of Nursing Routine": Infant Feeding since the 1930s
App. A. Deaths from Diarrhea Under Two Years of Age in Chicago
App. B. Percentage of Deaths Under Age One in Chicago by Cause, 1897 to 1939
App. C. What Chicago Mothers Fed Their Newborns, 1911-1933.
Chapters/HeadingsAuthor(s)PagesInfo
Showing 1 to 11 of 11 entries