Borstvoeding verlaagt kans op sterfte van baby
met wel 20%.*
Breastfeeding Decreases Infant
Mortality
- Data analyzed by scientists
at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences suggest that
breastfeeding can reduce the risk of death for infants in their first year of
life. Looking at infants between 28 days and one year of age, researchers
concluded that promoting breastfeeding can potentially prevent up to 720
postneonatal deaths in the U.S. each year
Researchers compared CDC
records of 1,204 children who died between 28 days and one year of causes other
than congenital anomalies or cancer with those of 7,740 children still alive at
one year.
Children who were breastfed
had 20% lower risk of dying between 28 days and one year than children who
weren't breastfed. Longer breastfeeding was associated with lower risk. The
effect was the same in both black and white children.
Breastfed infants in the U.S.
have lower rates of morbidity, especially from infectious disease, but there are
no contemporary US studies of the effect of breastfeeding on all-cause mortality
in the first year of life.
The study appears in the May
issue of the scientific journal, Pediatrics, and will be released at the 2004
Academic Pediatrics Societies meeting in San Francisco on May 2.
Aimin Chen, MD, Ph.D. and Walter J Rogan, MD (both in the Epidemiology Branch at NIEHS, one of the National Institutes of Health) are the authors of the study. Dr. Rogan said, "Although we knew that breastfeeding in the developing world was lifesaving, since it prevented diarrhea and pneumonia, we had no nationally representative data from the US on this very basic outcome. These data show that, even in the US, there is a modest decrease in mortality for breastfed children." (mei 2004)