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Breast Feeding Cuts
Infant Death 20 Percent
Breast-fed children in the United States
are 20 percent less likely to die during the first year of life
than whose who are not nursed, according to a study released.
Researchers at the National Institute
of Environmental Health Sciences said they based their finding
on a survey that included nearly 9,000 infant deaths in 48 states.
It found breast-fed babies were
20 percent less likely to die between 1 and 12 months of life
than those who were not, and that the longer babies were breast-fed,
the lower the risk of early death.
Aimin Chen, a physician who was
one of the authors of the study, said in an interview that the
protective effect appears to come from the "package of child care
skills" that goes along with nursing as well as the benefits of
the milk.
He said data from 2000 show that
70 percent of U.S. newborns are breast-fed when they leave the
hospital and at 6 months almost one third are. But there are still
racial and economic disparities in how widely the practice has
been adopted.
Other studies have shown breast-fed
babies are less likely to be overweight, have fewer behavioral
problems and may show differences in intelligence. They also may
grow up to have lower blood pressure.
Groups such as the American Academy
of Pediatrics recommend that all mothers breast-feed their babies
for the first year, and two years if possible.
The study was published in the
May edition of Pediatrics, the journal of the American Academy
of Pediatrics.
Reference
Source 89
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