%0 Journal Article %T Exploring Healthy Eating and Exercise Behaviors Among Low %A Alexandra L. MacMillan Uribe %A Beth H. Olson %J Journal of Human Lactation %@ 1552-5732 %D 2019 %R 10.1177/0890334418768792 %X Postpartum weight retention is often a significant contributor to overweight and obesity. Lactation is typically not sufficient for mothers to return to pre-pregnancy weight. Modifiable health behaviors (e.g., healthy eating and exercise) are important for postpartum weight loss; however, engagement among mothers, especially those who are resource-limited, is low. A deeper understanding of low-income breastfeeding mothers¡¯ healthy-eating and exercise experience, a population that may have unique motivators for health-behavior change, may facilitate creation of effective intervention strategies for these women. To describe the healthy-eating and exercise experiences of low-income postpartum women who choose to breastfeed. Focus group discussions were conducted with low-income mothers (N = 21) who breastfed and had a child who was 3 years old or younger. Transcript analysis employed integrated grounded analysis using both a priori codes informed by the theory of planned behavior and grounded codes. Three major themes were identified from five focus groups: (a) Mothers were unable to focus on their own diet and exercise due to preoccupation with infant needs and more perceived barriers than facilitators; (b) mothers became motivated to eat healthfully if it benefited the infant; and (c) mothers did not seek out information on maternal nutrition or exercise but used the Internet for infant-health information and health professionals for breastfeeding information. Low-income breastfeeding mothers may be more receptive to nutrition education or interventions that focus on the mother-infant dyad rather than solely on maternal health %K breastfeeding %K focus group %K maternal health %K postpartum care %K theory of planned behavior %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0890334418768792