|
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.
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.
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 bumped 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.
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.
About the
Author
Anne Smith, anne@breastfeeding-basics.com
http://www.breastfeeding-basics.com
Anne Smith is an IBCLC &endash; International Board Certified
Lactation Consultant and La Leche Leader since 1978. More
importantly, she is a mother to 6 breast fed kids with twenty plus
years experience of counseling nursing mothers. Her site,
www.BreastfeedingBasics.com
, provides expert advice and solutions to breast-feeding problems and
gives basic information on how to breast feed. Anne also features her
recommended breast feeding products and breast pumps.