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Breastfeeding Benefits: How They Add Up
Most new mothers
wonder how long they should breastfeed their baby. While the
American Academy of Pediatrics recommends nursing for at
least the first year of life, this may not be a realistic
goal for many mothers. It is important to know that even if
you only nurse your baby for a few weeks or even a few days,
you will both receive many important benefits from the
nursing relationship.
Here is some information which may help you decide how
long to nurse your baby:
If you nurse your baby for the first few days after birth,
he will get a healthy dose of colostrum, the clear or golden
colored fluid that your breasts have been producing since
the latter part of your pregnancy. You may have noticed some
of it leaking out while you were pregnant. Colostrum is
different from mature milk. It is thick and sticky, and
provides important disease fighting antibodies that the baby
can't get anywhere else. It is highly concentrated, and is
easy for the newborn's immature system to digest. Its main
function is
to protect the newborn from infection by coating the baby's
intestinal tract and acting as a barrier to prevent the
invasion of harmful bacteria. It protects your baby from
illnesses that you have been exposed to, as well as
illnesses that he may be exposed to. It also provides
important nutrients, which is especially important for
babies who are sick or premature. Colostrum also functions
as a laxative, helping clean out meconium (the dark
greenish/black tarry stool that the baby's intestines form
before birth), helping reduce the incidence of jaundice in
the newborn baby.
Sometime between the second and fifth day after your baby is
born, your milk will change from colostrum to transitional
milk, which is thinner and more plentiful. This milk also
contains important antibodies, which will continue to
protect your baby for as long as he nurses. After about the
tenth to fourteenth day, the colostrum is gone, but the
mature milk will continue to produce antibodies, just not as
concentrated as the colostrum. The protein in breast milk is
much easier to digest that the protein in cow's milk or
formula, making your baby less likely to suffer from
digestive problems such as gassiness, rashes, and
colic.
Breastfeeding during these early days is helpful for you as
well as your baby. Breastfeeding helps you develop a special
closeness as you get to know this special little person who
has entered your life, and also helps your body recover from
childbirth more quickly by releasing hormones that contract
your uterus and reduce post-partum bleeding.
The benefits of breastfeeding in the early days provide an
excellent reason to nurse your baby as early and as
frequently as possible after birth, even if you feel that
you can only do it for a short period of time.
If you nurse your baby for 4-6 weeks, you will be helping to
ease his transition through the most vulnerable part of his
infancy. Babies who are breastfed have lower rates of many
illnesses, including digestive and respiratory problems,
pneumonia and meningitis, and SIDS. For more information
about the protective benefits, see the article "Why
Breastfeed?…)
Breastfeeding during the early weeks also helps you relax.
Nursing 'forces' you to stay off your feet and sit still for long periods of time, since babies nurse so often during the
first weeks of nursing while they are establishing your milk
supply and growing so quickly. When you are bottle-feeding,
it's easy to let someone else feed the baby while you run
around cleaning house or shopping. I think nursing is
nature's way of helping you get the rest you need while you
are recovering from childbirth. Think about it - mothers
used to stay in bed or in the hospital for at least a week
or two after giving birth - now they are up and running
after a 48 hour hospital stay.
The hormone prolactin that is released when you nurse is
called "the mothering hormone", and helps you
relax. When researchers feed it to laboratory mice, (even
males), they start building nests and doing motherly things.
It really is a powerful hormone, and many mothers report
that even when they are extremely stressed, they feel a rush
of relaxation when their milk lets down.
If you nurse for 3-4 months, your baby will be much less
likely to develop ear infections. Studies have found that
babies who were exclusively breastfed for at least four
months had half as many ear infections as formula fed
babies.
Nursing can help you lose the extra weight you put on during
pregnancy. Mothers who breastfed lose more weight by the
time their babies are 3-6 months old that formula-feeding
mothers who consumed fewer calories, because breast milk
production mobilizes the fat you stored during pregnancy
(see the article on "Nutrition,
Weight Loss, Exercise and Breastfeeding" for more
information).
By the time you have been nursing for a few months, you have
overcome any early obstacles such as engorgement, sore
nipples, and marathon cluster feedings. Nursing is so much
easier than bottle-feeding at
this stage - no bottles to wash or carry, no constipation,
and poops and spit up that smell so much better than
formula-fed babies. Also, your baby isn't nursing as often
as a newborn, and you can give him occasional bottles if you
choose to, which helps free you up from total responsibility
for all feedings.
If you nurse for 6 months, your baby will be much less
likely to have problems with allergies, since at around that
time, your baby's intestinal tract begins to produce
antibodies which coat his intestines and protect him from
foreign proteins and allergens.
Mother's milk will supply all the nutrients your baby needs
for at least the first six months of life, and if you have a
family history of allergies, it's a good idea to wait until
6 months before introducing solid foods, as allergies are
less likely to develop after this time.
Most mothers who exclusively breastfeed for six months will
not have a period during that time, and rarely ovulate. If
you are nursing with no supplements or solids, you have
about a 98% rate of protection against pregnancy. This
only applies if you are totally breastfeeding:
no water, formula, pacifiers or scheduling feedings.
Most mothers will use an additional method of birth control
during this time.
Many of the studies of the protective effects of
breastfeeding use the six- month mark as a cutoff. That
means that researchers have found that nursing for at least
six months has been shown to have protective effects against
many illnesses, such as child hood cancers.
If you nurse for 9 months, you will be helping him through
one of the most important developmental periods of his young
life. Babies between 6 and 9 months go through so many
changes - sitting up, teething, starting solids, crawling,
pulling up, and more. Even though an older baby is eating
solid foods, breastmilk is still the most important part of
his diet, and continues to provide him with important
immunities at a time when he is crawling around and putting
EVERYTHING in his mouth, including yucky, germy stuff.
Lots of research points to the beneficial effects of breast
milk on a baby's intellectual development. Breastfed
babies score an average of 8 points higher on IQ tests than
formula-fed babies, and this seems to hold true even when
things like parent's educational and socio-economic
backgrounds are factored in.
If you nurse for a year, your baby will receive health
benefits that last a lifetime. Long-term nursing protects
against ulcerative colitis, diabetes, asthma, Crohn's
disease, obesity, and high cholesterol in adulthood. Babies
who are breastfed for a year or more are less likely to need
speech therapy or braces later in life.
Thing about the cost savings if you nurse for a year!
Formula can cost as much as $200.00 a month, depending on
the type you use. The cost of bottles, nipples, and extra
doctor's visits also add up. You can easily save over $1,000
during the first year by nursing your baby.
If your baby nurses for more than a year (or until he
outgrows the need), you will continue to provide him with
the best form of nutrition. The fact that most babies can
tolerate cow's milk after one year doesn't mean that they
don't continue to get benefits from nursing. The
concentration of antibodies in human milk becomes more
concentrated as the volume they consume goes down.
During the toddler stage, your baby will encounter many
spills and bumps and bruises as he navigates his new world.
Nursing provides a perfect way to comfort a toddler who had
bumpe d
his knee, or who is fighting sleep after a busy day.
Children who are breastfed long-term tend to be more secure
than babies who are weaned early, because they have had
their needs met during the vulnerable
period of infancy. Don't worry that your baby will nurse
forever - all babies wean eventually, no matter what you do.
Children grow up way too quickly, and the time they spend
nursing is so short in comparison to the 18 years that they
spend at home. (see article on "Weaning"
for more information).
Long-term nursing provides benefits for moms, too. Many of
the benefits of breastfeeding are dose-related. This means
that, for example, the longer you breastfeed over the course
of your lifetime, the lower your risk of breast cancer and
osteoporosis.
Whether you nurse your baby for
days, weeks, months, or years, you will both benefit. Some
mothers are hesitant to begin breastfeeding if they
know they won't nurse for long. It's worth giving it a try.
Even if it doesn't work out, you can always stop nursing at
any point. Many mothers start out with the intention of only
nursing for a short time, and then find that they keep going
much longer than they ever thought they would. Take it one
day at a time, and remember than even one feeding at the
breast provides important benefits to both you and your
baby.
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