Scottish Daily Mail

Breastfeed­ing can halve mum’s risk of diabetes

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

WOMEN who breastfeed their babies can see their risk of developing diabetes later in life cut by almost half, research suggests.

A study tracking mothers over 30 years found those who breastfed even for a short while were 25 per cent less likely to get Type 2 diabetes than women who had never breastfed.

And for those who persisted for more than six months the risk dropped 47 per cent.

Scientists believe this protective effect is because sugar is diverted from the blood stream into breastmilk, so less glucose is circulatin­g in the body.

Experts have long advised women to breastfeed for the sake of their child’s health, but growing evidence suggests it also has a profound impact on the mother herself. Recent studies have shown women who breastfeed are also less likely to suffer heart attacks, strokes and even some forms of cancer.

In the study, which followed 1,200 mothers, researcher­s from the Kaiser Permanente Institute in California carried out blood tests every five years to check whether the women had developed diabetes.

The women, who were aged 18 to 30 at the beginning of the study, were all free of the condition at the outset. But by the end 182 had developed diabetes – 15 per cent of all participan­ts.

The scientists found those who breastfed, rather than giving their baby formula milk, were less likely to develop the disease. And the longer they breastfed, the greater the impact. They believe this is because women who are breastfeed­ing have less glucose in their blood. ‘Lactating women have lower circulatin­g glucose ... as well as lower insulin secretion, despite increased glucose production rates,’ they said.

‘About 50g of glucose per 24 hours is diverted into the mammary gland for milk synthesis.’

Women who breastfeed also lose more fat, using up an additional 300 calories a day, which may also have an impact on diabetes, they wrote in the JAMA Internal Medicine journal.

Dr Tracy Flanagan, director of women’s health for Kaiser Permanente, added: ‘We have known for a long time that breastfeed­ing has many benefits both for mothers and babies, however, previous evidence showed only weak effects on chronic disease in women. Now we see much stronger protection ... showing that mothers who breastfeed for months after their delivery may be reducing their risk of developing Type 2 diabetes by up to one half as they get older.’ The NHS suggests women should exclusivel­y breastfeed their babies until they are at least six months old, and then continue breastfeed­ing while gradually introducin­g solid food.

However most mothers in the UK abandon breast milk very early in their child’s life, turning instead to formula. Only 34 per cent of British children are breastfed until six months, compared with 49 per cent in the US and 62 per cent in Switzerlan­d. And only one in every 200 children in the UK – just 0.5 per cent – are breastfed until the age of 12 months, the lowest level in the world.

Last night Claire Livingston­e, of the Royal College of Midwives, said: ‘Increasing breastfeed­ing rates could make a significan­t contributi­on to prevent future ill health of women and babies.

‘No mother should be pressurise­d into feeding her baby in a way she is not comfortabl­e with. But we do believe with good advice and support many more women could breastfeed and for longer.’

‘Benefits mothers and babies’

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