Breastfed Infants Show Multiple Benefits

A British study of 9,000 youngsters monitored from birth to age 10 strongly suggests that breast-fed infants are better able in later life to cope with stressful situations than bottle-fed babies. It is thought that breast-feeding influences development of pathways in the body linked to the stress response. For example, anxiety appeared to be less in breast-fed babies when their parents later separated or divorced.

Other benefits of breast-feeding a child have long been known. Breast milk contains nutrients, hormones, enzymes, growth factors and antibodies that mothers pass to their child. Research has shown that breast-feeding reduces infections, respiratory illness and diarrhea in babies.


Although the benefits of breast-feeding are confirmed in study after study, a Finnish study of 200 mothers and their babies revealed new information about the optimal length of breast-feeding.

Babies who were breast-fed up to six months seemed to avoid early allergies that more frequently developed in young children whose mothers nursed them for nine months or more. The hypothesis is that after a certain time frame, the immune system needs exposure to external antigens to develop properly.

Allergic reactions appeared earlier in children exclusively breast-fed for longer than nine months. When weaned by six months, children’s allergies occurred in later childhood and early adulthood and seemed to be influenced by pollen exposure, diet and disease.

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