Daily Nation Newspaper

BREASTFEED­ING FOR TWO MONTHS HALVES RISK OF SIDS

Researcher­s determine duration needed for protective benefit for baby

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BREASTFEED­ING for at least two months cuts a baby's risk of Sudden Infant Death Syndrome almost in half, a sweeping new internatio­nal study has found.

The study determined that mothers do not need to breastfeed exclusivel­y for their baby to get the benefit, potentiall­y good news for moms who can't or choose not to rely solely on breastfeed­ing.

"These results are very powerful! Our study found that babies who are breastfed for at least two months have a significan­t reduction in their risk of dying from SIDS," said researcher Kawai Tanabe, MPH, of the University of Virginia School of Medicine. "Breastfeed­ing is beneficial for so many reasons, and this is really an important one."

PREVENTING SIDS

Previous studies have suggested that breastfeed­ing was associated with a decreased risk of SIDS, the leading cause of death of babies between 1 month and one year of age, but this study is the first to determine the duration necessary to provide that protection.

The researcher­s found, after adjusting for variables that could distort their results, that breastfeed­ing for at least two months was associated with a significan­t decreased risk. Breastfeed­ing for less than two months did not offer such a benefit.

"Breastfeed­ing for just two months reduces the risk of SIDS by almost half, and the longer babies are breastfed, the greater the protection," said researcher Fern Hauck, MD, of the UVA School of Medicine and the UVA Children's Hospital. "The other important finding from our study is that any amount of breastfeed­ing reduces the risk of SIDS -- in other words, both partial and exclusive breastfeed­ing appear to provide the same benefit."

To determine the effects of breastfeed­ing on SIDS risk, the researcher­s analyzed eight major internatio­nal studies that examined 2,259 cases of SIDS and 6,894 control infants where death did not occur.

This large collective sample demonstrat­ed the consistenc­y of findings despite differing cultural behaviors across countries, and it provides convincing evidence of the reliabilit­y of the findings.

Based on their results, the researcher­s are calling for "ongoing concerted efforts" to increase rates of breastfeed­ing around the world.

Data from 2007 showed that a quarter of U.S. babies had never been breastfed, the researcher­s report. (The World Health Organizati­on has establishe­d a goal of having more than half of infants worldwide being breastfed exclusivel­y for at least six months by 2025.)

"It's great for mothers know that breastfeed­ing for at least two months provides such a strong protective effect against SIDS," said researcher Rachel Moon, MD, of the UVA School of Medicine and the UVA Children's Hospital. "We strongly support internatio­nal and national efforts to promote breastfeed­ing."

It remains unclear why breastfeed­ing protects against SIDS, though the researcher­s cite factors such immune benefits and effects on infant sleeping patterns as possible mechanisms.

 ??  ?? Mother breastfeed­ing her little baby
Mother breastfeed­ing her little baby

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