Abstract
Research suggests that ‘babywearing’ (the use of slings, wraps, and carriers) can have beneficial effects on the quality of parent-child attachment, maternal well-being, paternal responsiveness, breastfeeding behaviour, child mood, and child sleeping patterns. Recently, there has been a growth in the popularity of babywearing, but reports suggest there are significant challenges in engaging and maintaining the practice. This research used qualitative methods and concepts from behavioural science (the Theoretical Domains Framework and the COM-B model) to investigate the psychological, social, cultural, economic, and logistic factors that mothers perceive as barriers and enablers in relation to babywearing. Seventeen mothers with experience of babywearing were interviewed. They reported both positive and negative aspects of babywearing, and many factors that made babywearing easier or more difficult. Notable issues including access to babywearing equipment, access to training and support, difficulty/ease of use, convenience/empowerment relative to other baby transport solutions, physical capacity, and social pressure/support. The findings provide a rich social, motivational, and behavioural description of the factors that influence people’s decision to babywear and suggest several approaches that baby-wearing advocates could use to support their work.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 288-299 |
| Number of pages | 12 |
| Journal | Early Childhood Research Quarterly |
| Volume | 74 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2026 |
Keywords
- Attachment parenting
- Baby carrier
- Child carrying
- Kangaroo care
- Mother-infant relationship
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