Article
Details
Citation
Roberts SC, Damon F, Durand K, Havlíček J, Kourtis D, Langford B, Sorokowska A, Sorokowski P, Swanson V, Williams J, Arnoldi-Meadows T, Brimaud D, Dlouhá D, Jelínková L, Kaňková Š, Kapicová L, Poirier AC, Roberts K, Sander JC, Schwambergová D, Silvestri M, Wang N, Simon E & Schaal B (2026) Breastfeeding, bonding, and olfaction: unlocking the potential of mother-infant odour exchange. eBioMedicine, 123, p. 106086. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2025.106086
Abstract
Breastfeeding is crucial for infant survival, growth, and health, and it enhances maternal-infant bonding and well-being. However, breastfeeding rates typically fall below international targets, partly due to a high prevalence of latching difficulties, intermittent sucking, refusing the breast, or poor milk supply. Here, we propose that such uniquely human difficulties might be ameliorated by recognising, understanding, and facilitating the olfactory mechanisms that, in other mammals, regulate breastfeeding initiation and maternal–infant relationships in the first weeks of life. We briefly review evidence that odour mediates nipple-searching and suckling behaviour in other species, summarise the comparable evidence in humans, and outline pathways that could potentially reap hitherto unrealised benefits of olfactory communication between human mothers and neonates. We argue that enhanced awareness of such odour exchange could inform and enable changes in both policy and practice that might improve breastfeeding success and maternal-infant bonding, ultimately contributing to reduced infant mortality worldwide.
Journal
eBioMedicine: Volume 123
| Status | Published |
|---|---|
| Publication date | 31/01/2026 |
| Publication date online | 31/12/2025 |
| Date accepted by journal | 05/12/2025 |
| Publisher | Elsevier BV |
| ISSN | 2352-3964 |
| eISSN | 2352-3964 |
People (4)
Senior Lecturer, Psychology
Professor of Social Psychology, Psychology
Research Assistant, Psychology
Professor, Psychology