Abstract

Policies supporting breastfeeding vary by state, but little is known about the geographical aspects of this variation. This study describes state breastfeeding licensing and administrative regulations targeting child care settings, compares regulations with national standards, and examines the spatial patterning and clustering of these regulations throughout the United States (US). We compared regulations for child care centers (centers) and family child care homes (homes) with national standards for: (1) general breastfeeding support; (2) designated place for breastfeeding; (3) no solids before infants are four months of age; and (4) no formula for breastfed infants without parent permission. We scored state regulations as 0 = standard not addressed, 1 = standard partially addressed, and 2 = standard fully addressed. We considered each regulation individually, and also summed scores to provide an overall rating of regulations by state. We mapped regulations using geographic information systems technology, and explored overall and local spatial autocorrelation using global and local variants of Moran’s I. Five states had regulations for centers and two for homes that addressed all four standards. Mean regulation scores were 0.35, 0.20, 0.98, 0.74 for centers, and 0.17, 0.15, 0.79, 0.58 for homes. Local Moran’s I revealed that New York and Pennsylvania had substantially stronger regulations than their adjacent states, while Florida had weaker regulations than its neighbors. Overall, few states had regulations that met breastfeeding standards. We identified some patterns of spatial correlation, suggesting avenues for future research to better understand distributions of regulations across the US.

Highlights

  • We identified four standards from Caring for our Children that support breastfeeding in child care settings: (1) facilities should encourage and support breastfeeding; (2) facilities should have a designated place for mothers to breastfeed; (3) solid foods should not be introduced before infants are four months of age, but preferably six months; and (4) infant formula should not be fed to a breastfed infant without parent permission

  • The standard requiring parent permission to feed infant formula to breastfed infants was addressed in 39 state regulations for centers and 29 state regulations for homes

  • The majority of states had regulations addressing the standard prohibiting the introduction of solid foods to infants \four months of age, as well as regulations requiring parental permission to give formula to breastfed infants

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study was threefold: (1) to review current state regulations mandating support for breastfeeding in child care; (2) to compare these regulations to national breastfeeding standards; and (3) to examine spatial patterns in breastfeeding regulations across the US

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