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1.
J Hum Lact ; 38(1): 16-20, 2022 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34802308

RESUMO

Marina Ferreira Rea is a Brazilian medical doctor. She has a masters and a doctorate degree in public health from the University of São Paulo (USP). She specialized in breastfeeding at Wellstart International, and completed post-doctoral research at Columbia University, New York, USA, focusing on working women and breastfeeding. She was a researcher at the Health Institute at Columbia University in New York, the Center for Population and Family Health, and at the postgraduate studies, Nutrition in Public Health, University of São Paulo, where she advised many students and published many articles and books (a few selected below). She was a Coordinator of International Breastfeeding Actions at the World Health Organization (Geneva), in the early 1990s, when actions like the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative, breastfeeding counseling, and other courses were started. During this same period, the World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action (WABA) and World Breastfeeding Week were initiated. In 1981 she participated in the launching of the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes. Marina Rea is a member of the International Baby Food Action Network and its Latin American policy committee, and is the founder of the International Baby Food Action Network (IBFAN) Brazil group. Since 2017, she has been a member of the IBFAN Global Council. She is now retired but continues to volunteer as an IBFAN member. She has two daughters and four grandchildren. A more detailed curriculum vitae in Portuguese can be found here: http://lattes.cnpq.br/8193850878281835 (MR = Marina Rea; MA = Maryse Arendt).


Assuntos
Aleitamento Materno , Leite Humano , Feminino , Promoção da Saúde , Direitos Humanos , Humanos , Lactente , Marketing , Organização Mundial da Saúde
2.
J Hum Lact ; 35(2): 354-361, 2019 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30920849

RESUMO

In early twentieth-century Brazil the proponents of human milk banking considered this development to signal the end of wet nursing and the start of a whole new day, one altogether better for the paid donors of human milk, their children, and the children in need of human milk. But wet nursing persisted alongside the new human milk banks for most of the twentieth century. Moreover, as this paper argues, the organizers and directors of milk banks drew on and constructed ideas about wet nursing, and about the generations of poor Afro-Brazilian women who had performed this labor, in the design and operation of the first milk banks.


Assuntos
Aleitamento Materno/estatística & dados numéricos , Bancos de Leite Humano/estatística & dados numéricos , Leite Humano , Percepção Social , Doadores de Tecidos/estatística & dados numéricos , Atitude Frente a Saúde , Brasil , Feminino , Humanos , Recém-Nascido , Mães/estatística & dados numéricos
3.
J Hum Lact ; 34(4): 804-809, 2018 Nov.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30231217

RESUMO

Brazil imported more enslaved Africans than any other slave-owning society in the Americas, and it was the last country in the western hemisphere to abolish the institution. Whereas many enslaved persons toiled on plantations and in mines, urban slavery was also prominent, with enslaved men carrying coffee through the streets and enslaved women washing clothes. One gendered aspect of urban slavery in 19th-century Brazil included slave owners renting out enslaved women as wet nurses to breastfeed the children of elite families. This article reviews medical dissertations, debates, and journal articles, as well as advertisements for wet nurses, showing that physicians believed that enslaved women's milk was both nutritionally and morally inferior to white women's milk. In the latter half of the 19th century, physicians viewed abolition as the only answer to what they deemed the increasingly "dangerous" practice of enslaved wet nursing, which they believed was the root cause of high infant mortality rates across races and classes. Readers should consider the ethical dilemmas of the practice of enslaved wet nursing, which often resulted in the violent separation of mother and child.


Assuntos
População Negra/etnologia , Aleitamento Materno/etnologia , Leite Humano , População Branca/etnologia , Brasil/etnologia , Aleitamento Materno/história , Escravização/etnologia , Escravização/história , História do Século XIX , Humanos , Segregação Social/história
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