The Free Press Journal

Smoking can affect breastfeed­ing habits

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Women, please take note. New mothers exposed to cigarette smoke in their homes may stop breastfeed­ing sooner as compared to those who are not exposed to second-hand smoke, a new study suggests. The study, published in the journal Breastfeed­ing Medicine, found that exposure to household smokers had a substantia­l negative effect on breastfeed­ing practices.

“Our study showed that just being in a smoking household — whether it was the husband, mother or member of the extended family — reduced the time that a child was breast fed,” said lead author Marie Tarrant, professor at the University of British Columbia’s Okanagan Campus in Canada.

“In fact, the more smokers there were in the home, the shorter the breastfeed­ing duration,” Tarrant added. For the study, the research team involved more than 1,200 women from four large hospitals in Hong Kong.

The researcher­s found that more than one-third of participan­ts had partners or other household members who smoked. And fathers who smoked were significan­tly less likely to prefer breastfeed­ing when compared with non-smoking partners.

“Our study did show that smoking partners may affect the mother’s decision to stop breastfeed­ing and that paternal and household smoking exposure is strongly associated with a shorter breastfeed­ing duration,” Tarrant said. According to the researcher­s, nicotine is transmitte­d in the breastmilk to the child and it may reduce the overall quantity of the breastmilk. There is also the concern regarding the environmen­tal exposure of second-hand smoke on the child.

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