Nursing Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Nursing, including details on health care, hospital staff, professional care. | ||||||||
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Breast-feeding and mental and motor development at 51/2 years.Clark KM, Castillo M, Calatroni A, Walter T, Cayazzo M, Pino P, Lozoff B Center for Human Growth and Development, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, 48109, USA. OBJECTIVE: Breast-feeding is associated with better child development outcomes, but uncertainty remains primarily due to the close relationship between breast-feeding and socioeconomic status. This study assesses the issue in a low socioeconomic status sample where breast-feeding was close to universal. METHODS: Seven hundred eighty-four Chilean children were followed longitudinally from infancy. All but four were initially breastfed, 40% nursed beyond 12 months, and infant growth was normal. Child development was assessed at 5(1/2) years by a cognitive, language, and motor test battery. The duration of breast-feeding as the sole milk source was analyzed as a continuous variable, adjusting for a comprehensive set of background factors. RESULTS: The relationship between breast-feeding and most 5(1/2)-year developmental outcomes was nonlinear, with poorer outcome for periods of breast-feeding as the sole milk source for <2 months or >8 months--statistically significant for language, motor, and one comprehensive cognitive test, with a suggestive trend for IQ. CONCLUSIONS: The observed nonlinear relationships showed that breast-feeding as the sole milk source for <2 months or >8 months, compared with 2-8 months, was associated with poorer development in this sample. The latter finding requires replication in other samples where long breast-feeding is common and socioeconomic status is relatively homogeneous. Published 13 March 2006 in Ambul Pediatr, 6(2): 65-71.
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