Everyone seems to have an opinion on how we should feed our babies, but
the American Academy of Pediatrics is taking a more evidence-based approach in
its recommendations.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
New
parents are inundated with advice on how to feed their newborns. The first
matter to confront new parents, and one in which the advisors tend to harbor
unusually strong opinions, is the one of breastfeeding. Then there is no
shortage of advice on when to start solid foods and whether they should start
with fruits or vegetables. However, the evidence for many of these opinions is
mostly anecdotal.
In an
effort to offer pediatricians and parents an update on the
state-of-the-science, the American Academy of Pediatrics has published an entire supplement to its journal Pediatrics
summarizing evidence collected from six years of follow-up on children in the
Infant Feeding Practices Study II.
The Infant
Feeding Practices Study II is a longitudinal cohort study on mothers and their
babies beginning in the third trimester of pregnancy through the infants’ first
birthdays. A follow-up assessment was conducted for all subjects again at the
children’s sixth birthday. Among the data collected are a variety of details on
each mother-baby pair’s diet and nutrition.
Careful
statistical analyses revealed that children who are breastfed for their first
several months of life are less likely to have ear, sinus, and throat infections.
Otherwise, they did not differ in other outcomes recorded, including food
allergies. Breastfeeding led to no differences in psychosocial development in
the children. However, breastfed children had fewer emotional and behavioral
problems, although scientists determined this difference had more to do with
other parenting and domestic factors.
Children
who were breastfed tended to eat more fruits and vegetables and drank more
water than sweetened beverages. Children who did drink sweetened beverages
during their first year were twice as likely to be obese and still drinking
sweetened beverages at age six.
Children
who were not started on fruits and vegetables early tended to not eat as many
of these foods later compared with those who were given fruits and vegetables
early in life.
Mothers
who fed their babies with bottles, containing either pumped breast milk or
formula, were more likely to encourage their children to finish the bottle and
thus eat more. Breastfeeding did not seem to help mothers lose their pregnancy
weight.
Recommendations
included breastfeeding if possible, refrain from feeding infants sweetened
beverages, introduce fruits and vegetables within the first year, and do not
push an infant to finish a bottle or clean the plate of all food.
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