tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38545607.post2447376735034242545..comments2024-03-09T10:26:48.789+00:00Comments on economics, psychology, policy: Socio-economic predictors of breastfeeding in IrelandEmma Watsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11466193733741012673noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38545607.post-23787420448164807252010-07-31T15:51:59.890+00:002010-07-31T15:51:59.890+00:00There is information on the volume of drinking but...There is information on the volume of drinking but I haven't looked at it: only a blog post! The answer to the second question is No I think, though I think you might know whether they currently (8 or so years later) drink.<br />I agree about education but one might think of smoking & drinking as proxies for high discount rates. The education effect may not only be due to the psychological factors you mention, it could be due to access to information or support. I don't know much about the situation in Ireland - as far as I know there is not much support for breastfeeding in the hospitals in general: they don't have the resources. <br />In the US there are lactation consultants who's job it is to help mothers. But my guess is that middle class moms have, better support. Some hospitals also adopt "baby friendly" practices specifically: getting it right before discharge is important. From the UK data that we have been working with there is a big drop-off in breastfeeding after the first week.Kevin Dennyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17891633553910348880noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-38545607.post-36732727584357557512010-07-30T09:25:12.571+00:002010-07-30T09:25:12.571+00:00Interesting correlations, Kevin. My guess, from m...Interesting correlations, Kevin. My guess, from my own work on smoking and other health behaviours, and from personal observations regarding child-rearing, is that it all comes back to human capital investment and those unobservables which are correlated with such investments. Breastfeeding can be difficult, mothers are asked to start breastfeeding at a time when they are typically physically (and often emotionally as well) shattered. And there is an easy alternative with formula milk. It is an investment which takes a lot of self-discipline and will-power, so we would expect that it would be correlated with other human capital investments, like education and not smoking. The correlation with drinking is also perhaps not so surprising. Do you know how much the mothers drank? Also do you know if mothers who drank during pregnancy then abstained during breast-feeding? The dose-response relationship between drinking and health is non-montonic (unlike smoking), so it is quite possible that moderate drinking, while not quite a health investment, would not be viewed as being as injurious to health as smoking (while writing this I can't help being reminded of a memorable scene from "The Snapper"!).David Maddennoreply@blogger.com