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Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town

Return to work is a recurring reason for premature weaning of breastfeeding infants among low-income South African individuals. Yet, breastfeeding research has largely been examined from the health perspective, leaving a gap in the literature regarding research on breastfeeding as a workplace issue....

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Main Author: Petersen, Rushda
Other Authors: Jaga, Ameeta
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Management Studies 2021
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access_status_str Open Access
author Petersen, Rushda
author2 Jaga, Ameeta
author_browse Jaga, Ameeta
Petersen, Rushda
author_facet Jaga, Ameeta
Petersen, Rushda
author_sort Petersen, Rushda
collection Thesis
description Return to work is a recurring reason for premature weaning of breastfeeding infants among low-income South African individuals. Yet, breastfeeding research has largely been examined from the health perspective, leaving a gap in the literature regarding research on breastfeeding as a workplace issue. Workplace support is needed to allow the combination of breastfeeding and work to become feasible for women returning to work. Informal support, particularly co-worker support, may be particularly important since formal workplace support are underutilised in low-income settings. This study seeks to provide insight into the factors which contribute to co-worker support for breastfeeding at work in a low-income factory setting, in Cape Town, South Africa. This study examined the relationships between coworkers' attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work and three possible predictors, (1) their perceptions of family supportive supervisor behaviours (FSSB) in the factory, (2) their personal breastfeeding experience and (3) their perceptions of fairness for breastfeeding at work. Furthermore, parental status was examined as a moderator on the relationship between co-workers' perceptions of fairness for breastfeeding at work and their attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work. Blue-collar workers in Cape Town clothing factories responded to the self-report questionnaire (N = 259). The study results revealed that FSSB, personal breastfeeding experience in the community (but not as a mother or in the factory), and perceptions of fairness for breastfeeding at work predicted positive attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work. Parental status did not moderate the relationship between perception of fairness for breastfeeding at work and co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work. Implications for practice and research are presented.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2021
publishDateRange 2021
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/32918 Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town Petersen, Rushda Jaga, Ameeta management studies Return to work is a recurring reason for premature weaning of breastfeeding infants among low-income South African individuals. Yet, breastfeeding research has largely been examined from the health perspective, leaving a gap in the literature regarding research on breastfeeding as a workplace issue. Workplace support is needed to allow the combination of breastfeeding and work to become feasible for women returning to work. Informal support, particularly co-worker support, may be particularly important since formal workplace support are underutilised in low-income settings. This study seeks to provide insight into the factors which contribute to co-worker support for breastfeeding at work in a low-income factory setting, in Cape Town, South Africa. This study examined the relationships between coworkers' attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work and three possible predictors, (1) their perceptions of family supportive supervisor behaviours (FSSB) in the factory, (2) their personal breastfeeding experience and (3) their perceptions of fairness for breastfeeding at work. Furthermore, parental status was examined as a moderator on the relationship between co-workers' perceptions of fairness for breastfeeding at work and their attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work. Blue-collar workers in Cape Town clothing factories responded to the self-report questionnaire (N = 259). The study results revealed that FSSB, personal breastfeeding experience in the community (but not as a mother or in the factory), and perceptions of fairness for breastfeeding at work predicted positive attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work. Parental status did not moderate the relationship between perception of fairness for breastfeeding at work and co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work. Implications for practice and research are presented. 2021-02-22T09:37:06Z 2021-02-22T09:37:06Z 2020 2021-02-22T09:36:49Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32918 eng application/pdf School of Management Studies Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle management studies
Petersen, Rushda
Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town
title_full Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town
title_fullStr Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town
title_full_unstemmed Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town
title_short Examining the predictors of co-worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in Cape Town
title_sort examining the predictors of co worker attitude towards support for breastfeeding at work in clothing factories in cape town
topic management studies
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/32918
work_keys_str_mv AT petersenrushda examiningthepredictorsofcoworkerattitudetowardssupportforbreastfeedingatworkinclothingfactoriesincapetown