To: Peach who wrote (173 ) 1/26/2001 8:57:11 AM From: AugustWest Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2067 Slightly OT... Breastfeed to cut infection, skin disorders CHICAGO, Jan. 24 (UPI) -- Breastfed infants had lower rates of stomach infection and skin disorders than did those not so nourished, researchers reported in Wednesday's issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association. The researchers say breastfeeding reduced the risk of gastrointestinal infection by 40 percent and of atopic eczema by 46 percent. Atopic eczema is a chronic, superficial skin inflammation found in people with an inherited likelihood to develop allergies. The study, which followed more than 16,000 infants for a year, was carried out in the former Soviet republic of Belarus by a team of researchers led by Michael Kramer of the McGill University Faculty of Medicine, Montreal, Canada. The randomized study is the first large-scale research effort that shows a link between breastfeeding and the reduction of risk in developing the two disorders, Kramer told United Press International. "A lot of people in developed countries like the United States say, 'In a place like this does it (breast feeding) really matter? Given that mortality rates are so low, and medical care is so good does it really make much of a difference?' I think the results show it does make a difference," said Kramer. Gastrointestinal infection and atopic eczema are common causes of infant illness leading to visits to doctors, he noted. The conditions have economic consequences as well as medical ones, including lost days of work by parents. The women received assistance from doctors and nurses to begin and maintain lactation and breastfeeding. The study demonstrates the importance of the role of doctors and nurses and nurses in supporting mothers in breastfeeding, said Ruth Lawrence, a professor of pediatrics at the University of Rochester, New York. The drop-off rate for breastfeeding in the United States is very high, she told UPI in a telephone interview: "Probably 10 percent of women exclusively breastfeed at six months." The federal government's health goal for 2010 is to have 75 percent of mothers breastfeeding at the point newborns leave the hospital and still 50 percent when infants are six months old, Lawrence explained. The study also is a wake up call to doctors and nurses to support and encourage breastfeeding in the United States, she asserted, adding "doctors and nurses in this country ought to educate themselves or accept education about the fundamentals of breast feeding." Both Kramer and Lawrence noted the study is a first step in an extensive longitudinal examination of the possible link between breastfeeding and a variety of disorders. Kramer plans to follow the infants for years to come, measuring whether breastfeeding has any link to high blood pressure, intelligence, behavior and allergies. Lawrence herself, in an editorial accompanying the study, wrote tracking the children will allow researchers to study the impact of breast feeding on neurodevelopment. Such studies can also determine whether breastfeeding can protect against childhood cancers and a variety of intestinal disorders, she said. (Reported by Harvey Black in Madison, Wisc.) (c) 2001 UPI All rights reserved. -0- Copyright 2000 by United Press International. *** end of story ***