Two months after delivery, 74.3 % of women with
available breastfeeding data (n = 2,185) continued to breastfeed.
Not exact matches
By that time, there was enough
data available to declare safe not only
breastfeeding without giving up the injections, but even not to stop taking them during pregnancy itself.
Statistics are being made
available via NHS England and Public Health England but this
data only covers Initiation of
Breastfeeding and
Breastfeeding at 6 - 8 weeks.
Available data on the links between a mother's nutrition and the nutrition and growth of her infant and current information on the risk of transmission through
breastfeeding of allergic diseases, environmental toxins, and certain viruses (including the HIV virus) are included.
We defined optimal levels as
breastfeeding for at least 1 year after each birth, consistent with medical recommendations.1, 2 Current
breastfeeding rates were taken from final monthly
data from the National Immunization Survey (see Appendix 1,
available online at http://links.lww.com/AOG/A398).
Of all postnatal eligible participants of the Generation R Study, questionnaires with
breastfeeding data were
available for 65 %.
There is a lot of
data on the statistics and barriers to continuing to
breastfeed when women return to work, but little practical information is
available on how actually to make it work.
Data concerning the safety of this vaccine during
breastfeeding is not
available.
Data concerning the safety of this vaccine for
breastfeeding infants is not
available.
Studies had to be case control for the purpose of the statistical analysis; have
breastfeeding as a measured exposure and leukemia as a measured outcome; include
data on
breastfeeding duration in months, including but not limited to, 6 months or more (where relevant
data were unavailable in the publication, the authors of the studies were contacted); and been published in peer - reviewed journals with full text
available in English.
Study Selection To be included in the meta - analyses, studies had to be case control; include
breastfeeding as a measured exposure and leukemia as a measured outcome; include
data on
breastfeeding duration in months; and be published in a peer - reviewed journal with full text
available in English.
To be included in the meta - analyses, studies had to be case control; include
breastfeeding as a measured exposure and leukemia as a measured outcome; include
data on
breastfeeding duration in months; and be published in a peer - reviewed journal with full text
available in English.
National
data for
breastfeeding rates among premature infants are not
available, but regional
data suggest these rates are low.
Although there were insufficient
data to explore the influence of the duration of feeding, exclusively
breastfed persons are likely to represent a group who are
breastfed for longer periods: ie, median
breastfeeding durations of 4 — 9 mo were reported among the 3 studies with
available data (24, 33, 35, 40).
In fact, the little
data that is
available on this says that infants who are in the adult be to
breastfeed and are then placed back to sleep in a safe crib are not at increased risk of SIDS (those would be the infants like my babies who bedshared in adult bed accidentally because the mother did not plan or intend to bedshare but passed out while night nursing and woke up several hours later).