Daily Mail

Planning to breastfeed? New mums can ask Alexa

- By Kate Pickles Health Reporter

FIRST she played music and answered questions about the weather.

Now alexa – amazon’s voice assistant – is to become a ‘breastfeed­ing friend’ for new mothers.

Public health England (PhE) has employed the services of the voice-activated assistant to provide help and support to new mothers 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Based on NhS advice and working with Mumsnet, new mothers can ask the device everything from if their baby is getting enough milk to tips on getting them to latch on.

This comes despite patients being told to avoid using Google to self-diagnose illnesses before visiting a health profession­al.

with alexa, the answers to the questions asked have been developed by the NhS and contain the same informatio­n as a patient could find on the PhE website.

Breastfeed­ing rates in England are some of the lowest in the world, with just 0.5 per cent of women still breastfeed­ing after one year.

Professor Julia Verne, of PhE, said she hoped the alexa initiative would reduce the breastfeed­ing dropout rates.

‘If you can get through those first few weeks, it gets easier,’ she said. ‘we don’t intend this to take the place of speaking to other mums and getting support through local breastfeed­ing groups or trained healthcare profession­als such as midwives and health visitors.’

It came as researcher­s found that women who breastfeed their babies for at least six months have healthier hearts more than a decade later.

US experts tracked 678 women for an average of 11 years from the birth of their child before carrying out medical checks.

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