@article{10818/37227, year = {2016}, month = {10}, url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10818/37227}, abstract = {Background Human lactancy is a simple and cost-effective strategy that influences infant and maternal mortality rates. Skin-to-skin contact (SSC) is an immediate postpartum period strategy that has proven to benefit the initiation and continuation of human lactation and to decrease hospitalization during the first week of life. This study aims to determine the effect of SSC initiation at birth (immediate versus early) in healthy, full-term newborns treated at the Universidad de La Sabana Clinic on the duration of exclusive human lactation.}, publisher = {Trials}, keywords = {Breast feeding}, keywords = {Skin-to-skin contact}, title = {The effect of skin-to-skin contact at birth, early versus immediate, on the duration of exclusive human lactancy in full-term newborns treated at the Clínica Universidad de La Sabana: study protocol for a randomized clinical trial}, doi = {10.1186/s13063-016-1587-7}, author = {Agudelo Pérez, Sergio Iván and Gamboa Garay, Oscar Andrés and Rodríguez Morales, Fabio and Cala, Sandra Milena and Gualdrón, Nathalie and Obando, Evelyn and Padrón, María Lucía}, }