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Back to: Children's Health > Updates    
     
Health Update
 

 

Breastfed Children Less Likely To Become Asthmatic

By Merritt McKinney, Medical Tribune News Service

SAN DIEGO -- Adding to growing evidence that breast-feeding can boost a child's health, a study presented here Sunday shows that consuming breast milk can reduce the risk of developing asthma. Compared with children given milk other than breast milk before they were 4 months old, those who were breast-fed exclusively for four months or longer were much less likely to develop asthma by their sixth birthday, according to the study, which was presented at the joint annual meeting of the American Lung Association and the American Thoracic Society.

Those who were breast-fed exclusively for less than four months were 27 percent more likely to develop asthma than other children, the study showed. And they were 44 percent more likely to experience excessive wheezing during the first year of life. Baby formula may be more convenient than breast milk, but it is ``fast food for babies,'' according to the study's author, Wendy H. Oddy of the University of Western Australia in Perth. ``It's very difficult to make a formula'' that can compete with breast milk, she said.

During the first few months of life, a number of substances in mother's milk, including immunoglobulins, help an infant's immune system to develop.``It sets people up for life,'' Oddy said. ``Maybe the message isn't getting through'' that breast-feeding is good for a child's health, she added. The Australian researcher and her colleagues based the findings on 2,834 children who were followed from birth until they turned 6 years old.

The study also found that children who consumed milk other than mother's milk at a younger age were more likely to have wheezing problems during the night and tended to be diagnosed with asthma at a younger age.



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