There’s little question about the value of breast milk as a source of infant nutrition, but a new study adds critical nuance toward better understanding the association between breastfeeding and infant health in the first year of life.
The researchers found that mothers who while pregnant said they intended to exclusively breastfeed, but then used formula once the baby was born, had children with health outcomes similar to exclusively breastfed infants. Only about half of mothers who intend to breastfeed are able to do so, and often their ability to breastfeed is beyond their control and not known until their baby is actually born.
The findings suggest that the mother’s characteristics, such as what they know about health and nutrition, could influence the benefits of breastfeeding reported in the vast majority of prior research. The results from the study could help guide policymakers and health care professionals when it comes to providing critical information to expectant mothers about feeding their newborns.
Food for thought
“It’s important to understand that we are not trying to imply that just intending to breastfeed is what’s leading to these health outcomes,” says study coauthor Jessica Su, an assistant professor in the sociology department at the University at Buffalo. “What we found is that intending mothers had more information about nutrition and diet; they more frequently consulted their physicians; and had better access to information related to infant health than those moms who did not intend to breastfeed.”
“This access to health care is an important policy focus. By sinking so much energy into getting moms to breastfeed, we miss something very important: that access to health care and the ability to take medical advice is critically important to a mother and her infant,” says Kerri Raissian, lead author and assistant professor in the public policy department at the University of Connecticut.
“By exploring factors influencing better infant health outcomes, information from the study helps contextualize the tradeoffs that a lot of mothers have to make when deciding how to feed their children,” Raissian says.
The findings are based on data from more than 1,000 participants in the Infant Feeding Practices Study II, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Food and Drug Administration designed, and appear in the journal Social Science & Medicine: Population Health.
Beyond ‘breast is best’
The World Health Organization and the American Academy of Pediatrics both recommend exclusively breastfeeding a child for six months. That message used to be presented as a healthy lifestyle choice, but today these agencies communicate the benefits of breastfeeding as a matter of public health.
“We don’t have the social support to facilitate the recommendations being put forth. The US is the only developed country with no federal paid parental leave, and only about 12 percent of mothers in the private sector have access to paid leave,” says Su.
“Paid maternity leave likely increases breastfeeding success, and also seems to have additional health benefits for mothers and infants,” she says. “If we have concerns about disparities in infant health, we need social policies that support these recommendations and also go beyond simply encouraging breastfeeding over formula.”
Breastfeeding is not always practical and may not produce the health benefits mothers hope for, yet the “breast is best” message is so strong that it can create undue stress and feelings of inadequacy for mothers who are unable to breastfeed. There is a high cost to this message, especially if it overstates the benefits of breastfeeding.
“It’s important to more carefully quantify the tradeoffs between breastmilk and formula given the strong breastfeeding recommendations and the realistic challenges that many mothers face, particularly among working mothers,” Su says.
Source: University at Buffalo