New Website Provides Personal Insight into Breastfeeding

14 May 2007

BU researcher with volunteers A new website featuring personal experiences of breastfeeding has gone ‘live’ in time for National Breastfeeding Awareness Week (May 13 - 19).

Dr Kath Ryan, Senior Research Fellow at BU, recorded the interviews with 49 women and two men from all parts of the UK for the new site - www.dipex.org/breastfeedingExternal Link.

The men featured are partners of women who were interviewed.

“Women learn about breastfeeding from listening to the experiences of other women,” says Dr Ryan, part of the WOMB Research Group within BU’s Institute of Health and Community Studies.

“The interviews we’ve gathered and presented are a timeless reminder of the personal nature of breastfeeding.

“Featuring these stories online makes this a powerful educational tool for women who are thinking about breastfeeding, those who are already breastfeeding, and the health professionals engaged in helping them,” she continues.

“We’re also responding to evidence that says people from disadvantaged groups rely more heavily on the internet for health information than do their advantaged counterparts, so this new website has the potential to change the way we think about breastfeeding support.”

The new breastfeeding site is part of the award-winning DIPEx website of people’s experiences of health and illness, and created in collaboration with the DIPEx Research Group in the Department of Primary Care at the University of Oxford.

As Dr Ryan explains, the unique site features freely-available video, audio and written clips of people talking realistically about their experiences.

Answers to frequently asked questions are also available online, as well as links to other websites containing reliable breastfeeding information, and links to support groups and other resources.

One of the participants, a 31-year-old mother of three, echoes Dr Ryan’s comments on the importance of having support in place when considering or involved in breastfeeding.

“I only managed to breastfeed properly once I had ‘hands on’ (practical) support and encouragement from women who had breastfed their own children – support is essential, I believe,” she says.

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