Combining Black Racial Groups Hides Health Disparities in Breastfeeding

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A new study from Amira Roess in the Department of Global and Community Health highlights the differences in breastfeeding initiation between African Americans and Black immigrants enrolled in the Washington, D.C. WIC supplemental nutrition program.

Image of Amira Roess

Illnesses such as sudden infant death syndrome, asthma, and obesity disproportionally affect African American populations, and researchers have long underscored that lower breastfeeding among African Americans is a reason why. A goal of the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) is to address this disparity in breastfeeding rates. However, the current way data are reported hides important differences among Black American subgroups and biases data. To understand the potential differences in breastfeeding initiation within this population, a group of researchers are comparing patterns in breastfeeding initiation between two Black subgroups, African Americans and Black immigrants, for clues.

A new study from Amira Roess, professor in the Department of Global and Community Health, showed that breastfeeding rates are significantly lower for African Americans compared to Black Immigrants and other race/ethnic groups.

“By looking more carefully at African Americans and Black immigrants we can see that combining the two can hide important health disparities since Black immigrant populations tend to have higher breastfeeding rates,” said Roess. “Without detailed breastfeeding initiation data by more nuanced race/ethnicity definitions, the potential for poorly targeted interventions and policies exists, and opportunities to improve breastfeeding may be missed.”

This research gathered data from participants in Washington, DC’s Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) from 2007-19. The Centers for Disease Control’s Healthy People 2020 provided 10-year objectives (ending in 2020) to increase American’s health, and one goal was to increase the number of infants who were breastfed. This goal was met nationally (81.9%), but not met for all racial subgroups. People in the non-Hispanic Black demographic had the lowest reported breastfeeding initiation (73.7%), which fell well below the Healthy People 2020’s goals. Roess’s study further dissected the non-Hispanic Black demographic into subgroups and found that African Americans have a lower breastfeeding rate (39.9%) than Black immigrants (69.6%). Overall, breastfeeding initiation for both groups increased over time in the study population, which mirrored the national trend, but at lower rates.

Image of woman breastfeeding a newborn baby

The paper titled “Disparities in Breastfeeding Initiation Among African American and Black Immigrant WIC Recipients in the District of Columbia, 2007–2019” was published online in March 2022 in the American Journal of Public Health.

The study defined African Americans as those self-reporting as African American, not Hispanic, and speaking English only. Black immigrants were defined as those self-reporting as African American and speaking a language other than English. Researchers acknowledged this definition may underestimate the Black immigrant population, especially because some may come from English-language countries.

The research team included Rebecca C. Robert from the Conway School of Nursing, Catholic University of America; Doris Kuehn, Emily Woody, Swathi Vinjamuri, and Paulette Thompson from the DC Department of Health, District of Columbia Women Infant Child State Agency; and Nwanneamaka Ume and Brianna Ericson from Milken Institute School of Public Health, George Washington University. Ume was supported by a fellowship from the Clara Schiffer Project on Women’s Health.