• UNICEF UK Homepage
Baby Friendly Logo Unicef UK
  • Health Professionals
    • Care Pathways
      • Breastfeeding
      • Bottle feeding
      • Feeding a preterm baby
    • Going Baby Friendly
      • Maternity
      • Community
      • University
      • FAQs
      • Neonatal standards
    • Training
      • Maternity staff
      • Health visitors
      • Children's centre staff
      • Neonatal course
      • Train the Trainer
      • More...
    • Conferences
      • This year's conference
      • Northern Ireland Conference 2013
      • Past conferences
    • New standards
    • Parents
      • Care Pathways
        • Breastfeeding
        • Bottle feeding
        • Feeding a preterm baby
      • Baby Friendly care
        • All about us
        • Health benefits
      • Problems
        • Tongue Tie
        • Engorgement
        • Mastitis
        • Sore nipples
        • Thrush
        • More...
      • Resources
        • Leaflets
        • Audio/Video
        • Other organisations
    • News and Research
      • Sign-up page
        • News mailings
        • Research mailings
      • Research
        • Research overview
        • Allergy
        • Asthma
        • Baby Friendly Initiative
        • Bed-sharing and infant sleep
        • More...
      • News
        • UNICEF UK Baby Friendly Initiative statement on new bed sharing research
        • Alex Salmond to open Baby Friendly annual conference
        • UNICEF UK Baby Friendly Initiative supports call for adherence to International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes
        • UNICEF UK launches guide to formula milk advertising for UK health professionals
        • UNICEF UK statement on new research into neonatal hypernatraemia
        • More...
      • Newsletters
        • May 2012 - Issue 33
        • June 2011 - Issue 32
        • August 2010
        • February 2010
        • October 2009
        • More...
    • Resources
      • Going Baby Friendly
        • Audit
        • Forms and checklists
        • Learning about breastfeeding
        • Writing policies and guidelines
      • Training resources
        • E-learning for GPs
        • Teaching packs for paediatric medical staff
        • Guidance on writing a curriculum
        • Teaching Breastfeeding Skills DVD
        • Breastfeeding management course workbook
        • More...
      • Leaflets and posters
        • Off to the best start
        • Introducing solid foods
        • Caring for your baby at night
        • Guide to bottle feeding
        • New posters
        • More...
      • Audio/Video
        • Hand expression
        • What effective breastfeeding looks like
        • Positioning and attachment
        • Public breastfeeding
        • Keeping mothers and babies close
        • More...
      • General reference
        • Department of Health breastfeeding care pathway - For Health Professionals
        • Medications and Mothers' Milk
        • Promoting, protecting and supporting breastfeeding – An introduction to the Baby Friendly Initiative
        • Co-ordinated introduction of best practice for breastfeeding across a local authority area
        • Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding
        • More...
      • Books
        • Medications and Mother's Milk 2012
        • Test tables
    • About Baby Friendly
      • All about us
        • Why we are needed
        • Baby Friendly FAQs
        • Other countries
      • UK Breastfeeding
        • UK Breastfeeding rates
        • Financial benefits
        • Health benefits
        • Recommendations
        • Other organisations
      • Awards
        • What are awards?
        • Maternity tables
        • University tables
        • Community tables
        • Maternity and Community
        • More...
      • About UNICEF
      Breastfeeding Research UNICEF UK/Jill Jennings 2009

      Bed sharing & breastfeeding, Ball 2003

      • Home
      • News and Research
      • Research
      • Bed-sharing and infant sleep
      • Bed sharing associated with longer breastfeeding: parents should get clear information
      • News and Research
        • Sign-up page
        • Research
          • Research overview
          • Allergy
          • Asthma
          • Baby Friendly Initiative
          • Bed-sharing and infant sleep
            • Bed sharing leads to more breastfeeding and may protect against SIDS
            • Study shows that bed sharing is common and supports breastfeeding
            • Study finds that co-sleeping supports breastfeeding
            • Bed sharing associated with longer breastfeeding: parents should get clear information
            • Infant sleep location on the postnatal ward
            • Bed sharing is common and may help breastfeeding
            • Breastfeeding mothers get more sleep when co-sleeping
            • Relationship between bed sharing and breastfeeding: Longitudinal, population-based analysis
            • Randomised trial of sidecar crib use on breastfeeding duration (NECOT)
          • Blood pressure
          • Bone density
          • Breast cancer
          • Childhood cancers
          • Cholesterol levels
          • Cot death
          • Dehydration
          • Dental health
          • Diabetes
          • Ear infections
          • Eczema
          • Gastro-intestinal illness
          • GP Consultations
          • Growth
          • Heart disease
          • HIV
          • Hypoglycaemia
          • Infant mortality
          • Infant nutrition
          • Interventions that promote breastfeeding
          • Mental development
          • Mental health
          • Miscellaneous
          • Necrotising enterocolitis
          • Obesity
          • Ovarian cancer
          • Pain relief in babies
          • Respiratory illness
          • Rheumatoid arthritis
          • Septicaemia
          • Skin-to-skin contact
          • Support for breastfeeding
          • Tongue tie
          • Urinary tract infections
          • Wheeze
        • News
        • Newsletters

      A recent study has shown that bed sharing is associated with longer breastfeeding and calls for parents to be given clear information about the risks and benefits.

      HL Ball (2003). Breastfeeding, bed-sharing, and infant sleep. Birth;30(3): 181-8 [Abstract]

       
       

      About Baby Friendly

      • Why we are needed
      • UK Breastfeeding rates
      • Health benefits of breastfeeding
      • Baby Friendly award tables
      • Sign up for email alerts

      Baby Friendly standards

      • New standards
      • Ten steps to successful breastfeeding
      • Seven point plan for breastfeeding in the community
      • Neonatal standards
      • University standards
      • The international code of marketing of breastmilk substitutes

      Accreditation

      • Maternity accreditation
      • Community accreditation
      • University accreditation

      Training

      • Breastfeeding and relationship building for maternity staff
      • Breastfeeding and relationship building for health visiting staff
      • Breastfeeding and relationship building for children's centre staff
      • Breastfeeding and lactation management for neonatal staff
      • Train the trainer
      • E-learning for GPs
      • Book online

      Conference

      • This year's conference
      • Northern Ireland conference

      Parents

      • Care pathways
      • Breastfeeding videos
      • Problems with breastfeeding
      • Tongue tie
      • Weaning

      Information

      • Research archive
      • News
      • Leaflets
      • Breastfeeding cost benefits report
      • Caring for your baby at night
      • A guide to infant formula for parents who are bottle feeding
      • Skin to skin contact
      • A guide for health workers to working within the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes

      Contact us

      Legal

      • Privacy Statement

      Site help

      • Sitemap

      Donations to UNICEF UK do not fund the Baby Friendly Initiative, the
      expenses of the Baby Friendly Initiative are covered by the costs of
      training and assessment. No element of profit for UNICEF or the baby
      friendly initiative is included in these costs. © 2010 UNICEF UK.

      • Flickr
      • YouTube
      • Google +
      • Twitter
      • Facebook