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Date: | Tue, 31 Mar 1998 04:11:42 -0500 |
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Anne Andrianos's question about how many breastmilk feeds it takes per day
to have an impact on a baby's health sent me thru my files for a talk I'm
sure I heard. Can't find the notes. This is what I *remember* hearing:
Someone looked at rates of various illnesses for formula-fed, cow milk-fed,
mixed feed (formula and breastmilk), and exclusively breastfed babies.
Exclusive bfing, of course, provided by far the best protection. But
mixed-feed babies were well ahead of those who had no human milk - The
graph looked like a high plateau for the breastfed babies, then a cliff
between breastfed and mixed-feed, followed by a slope down as the amount of
human milk decreased, followed by another cliff between *some* breastmilk
and *no* breastmilk.
I also remember the plain cow milk-fed babies having lower rates of certain
illnesses than formula-fed babies. Interesting!
Was it perhaps Allan Cunningham who gave a talk like this? Anyone
remember? *And where did I file my notes???*
Diane Wiessinger, MS, IBCLC, LLLL Ithaca, NY
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