Breastfeeding cuts cot death risk
2002-05-22 09:16
London - Mothers wanting to minimise the risk of cot death should breastfeed their babies because it could offer some protection against sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), Swedish researchers said on Wednesday.
Although doctors are not sure what causes seemingly healthy babies to die in their sleep, scientists at the Institute for the Health of Women and Children in Gothenburg found that babies who are breastfed for four months or more are less likely to die from SIDS.
"The study is supportive of a weak relation between breastfeeding and SIDS reduction," Dr Bernt Alm said in a report in The Archives of Disease in Childhood.
Alm and his team questioned the parents of 244 babies who had died of cot death about how long they had been breastfed and compared the results with the responses from parents of more than 800 healthy babies.
They discovered that babies who had been breastfed for less than eight weeks had between three and five times the risk of dying from cot death than the infants who had been fed naturally by their mother for four months or more.
"It is possible that frequent feeding of the infant, and the resultant closer contact between mother and child, decreases the risk," Alm said.
The cause of cot death, which occurs during the first year of life, is unknown. A campaign to encourage parents to put babies to sleep on their backs has reduced the number of babies dying from SIDS.
Parents are also advised to stop smoking, make sure their babies sleep on a clean mattress and not to let them get too hot.
In addition to offering some protection from cot deaths, breastfeeding has also been shown to reduce the risk of ear infections, allergies, vomiting and diarrhoea.
Breastfed babies are also less likely to become obese.