A study emerged out of Oxford University last week suggesting babies who are breastfed end up doing better in school.
Research just published in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin (Spoiled Milk: An Experimental Examination of Bias Against Mothers Who Breastfeed) reports mothers who breastfeed are widely viewed as less competent than otherwise identical females.
Importantly, we did not find evidence that gender of the participant influenced perceptions of the breastfeeding mother,notes the research team led by Montana State University psychologist Jessi L. Smith. Women, it seems, are just as likely as men to hold this bias.
In one experiment, 30 students told they were engaging in animpression formation studywere given biographical information on actress Brooke Shields, including the fact she had just written a book about motherhood. Half were told the volume included information on herexperiences with breastfeeding, bathing and overall care of a newborn;for the other half, the wordbottle-feedingwas exchanged forbreastfeeding.Afterward, the participants answered a series of questions gauging their overall assessment of the actress. Those who read she was breastfeeding her baby viewed her as
significantly more warm and friendly compared to the bottle-feeding mother, but significantly less competent in general, and less competent in math specifically,the researchers report.
In another experiment, 55 students were told they were participating in a study of how people form impressions of others in the face of limited information. They were asked to judge a woman they got to know by listening to her telephone answering machine.Specifically, they heard a message in which a man talks about changing the time of their dinner date. The rest of the message varied: Some participants heard a neutral conclusion, while others heard a reference to breastfeeding (
I figured you would want to go home and breastfeed the baby), motherhood (I figured you would want to go home and give the baby a bath), or sexuality (I figured you would want to go home and change into your strapless bra).The breastfeeding woman
was viewed significantly more negatively compared to the neutral voicemail on all measures of competence,Smith and her colleagues found. The woman in the strapless bra was also labeled as less competent, suggesting that the bias faced by breastfeeding womanis similar to the once experienced by a woman for whom the breast is sexually objectified,the researchers add.Asked if they would hire this woman for a job, the participants gave the lowest ratings to the breastfeeding woman — even below that of the woman with sexualized breasts. Interestingly, the woman giving her baby a bath was not penalized in this respect, suggesting it isn't parenthood per se that makes her less desirable as an employee.
For more, see Breastfeeding Women Viewed as Less Competent by , March 22, 2011 at Miller-McCune.
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