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Date: | Wed, 14 Feb 2007 07:18:12 -0800 |
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Hi All,
I couldn't resist looking for it - so found it and here it is quoted.
Rather sad if you ask me.
The percentage of women who report that they are still breastfeeding at 6
months
postpartum reached a high of 32.5 percent in 2001. At 6 months postpartum,
38.5 percent
of White, 38.2 percent of Hispanic, 32 percent of Native American and 21.9
percent of
African American women were still breastfeeding.83 There is a long list of
reasons why
breastfeeding is good for infants. Whether reducing the risk of SIDS should
be added to
that list remains unclear. Breastfeeding is a weak protective factor for
SIDS compared
to sleep position, which is why studies vary in whether an effect was even
found. Data
presented at the Society for Pediatric Research is probably the strongest
data for an
association yet seen.
The 2005 AAP policy statement on SIDS, The Changing Concept of Sudden Infant
Death
Syndrome: Diagnostic Coding Shifts, Controversies Regarding the Sleeping
Environment,
and New Variables to Consider in Reducing Risk, states that although
breastfeeding is
beneficial and should be promoted for many reasons, the AAP Task Force on
Sudden
Infant Death Syndrome believes that the evidence is insufficient to
recommend
breastfeeding as a strategy to reduce the risk of SIDS.
Regardless of whether it is protective against SIDS, breastfeeding is
clearly beneficial
for the overall health of an infant. It would be remiss, however, if
breastfeeding was not
addressed in the context of how it relates to bedsharing.
Bedsharing, as previously discussed, is a risk factor for SIDS that has also
been promoted
by some breastfeeding groups and lactation consultants to increase the
number of
breastfeeding mothers. This is currently a very controversial debate as to
how to address
the risks of bedsharing while encouraging breastfeeding.
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