Why Breast-feeding is Important for Mom’s Heart Health

Eleanor Bimla Schwarz believes doctors — and mothers-to-be — are making a big mistake if they think pregnancy and childbirth is a nine-month journey that ends in the delivery room.

The next months are critical too, she says, because that’s when both mother and baby build a foundation for long-term health through breast-feeding. The window of opportunity is small, she says. Once you’ve missed it, there’s nothing you can do.

Schwarz, professor of medicine at University of California-Davis, took the stage at TEDMED 2014 this week in the District of Columbia to call for a transformation in the way doctors and women view breast-feeding.

Doctors have long recognized that breast-feeding benefits babies by building up their immune systems and reducing the risk of allergies and respiratory illness. Mounting evidence suggests that breast-feeding babies also protects mothers by reducing their risk of heart disease — the leading killer of women.

[Read: The Facts on Heart Disease.]

“It’s a powerful message,” says Kristin Carman, vice president for health policy research at the American Institutes for Research, a nonprofit think tank in the District of Columbia. “It’s not just about baby’s health; it’s about your health, too.”

Carman says doctors who tell new mothers they’re likely to reduce their risk of illness by breast-feeding are also more likely to motivate them to come in for postpartum visits to get motherhood off to a healthy start.

“It’s the trifecta, a win-win-win for mother, baby and doctor,” she says. “That’s why it’s such a powerful concept.”

Schwarz proposed the new approach at TEDMED — an annual conference held this year in Washington, D.C. and San Francisco that focuses on innovation through technology, entertainment and design.

Schwarz was lead investigator in a study that examined the impact of breast-feeding on heart disease risks in nearly 140,000 women. The women were enrolled in the Women’s Health Initiative, a study designed to tease out the influence of family history, life style and countless other factors on a woman’s health risks. Each woman Schwarz studied had at least one healthy baby and all had passed through their reproductive years. The study, published in 2009, found that the longer that women breast-fed, the more they lowered their risk of heart disease.

[Read: What to Eat While Breast-feeding .]

Women who breast-fed for seven to 12 months reduced other risks, too, including high blood pressure, diabetes and high cholesterol — regardless of race, income, education and other socioeconomic factors.

Schwarz also carried out a study of 2,233 women in a managed care plan, showing that women who breast-fed their babies for less than one month had a higher risk of diabetes.

Despite the benefits of breast-feeding, Schwarz says, only 8 percent of hospitals adequately promote it. The World Health Organization and the United Nations Children’s Fund have outlined steps to promote breast-feeding through a “Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative.” Steps include starting breast-feeding within an hour after giving birth and allowing moms and babies to remain together 24 hours a day.

“It’s much easier to breast-feed a baby when the baby stays in its mother’s room,” Schwarz says.

Moms can see the full list of U.S. hospitals designated “Baby-Friendly” here.

Breast-feeding is a community health issue, Schwarz says. “These ‘baby friendly’ steps are key to saving thousands of mothers from heart disease,” she says.

[See: The Best and Worst Exercises for Pregnant Women .]

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Why Breast-feeding is Important for Mom’s Heart Health originally appeared on usnews.com

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