Nursing-Poncho-7144180

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breast feeding cover

Breastfeeding is the feeding of an infant or young child with breast milk directly from female human breasts (ie, via lactation) rather than from a baby bottle or other container. Baby is a sucking reflex that enables them to suck and swallow milk. Many specialists recommend exclusive mothers breastfeed for six months or more, without the addition of infant formula or solid food. There are conflicting views about how long exclusive breastfeeding remains beneficial to both mother and child. [1] [2] [3] [4]

KW Nursing cover Breastfeeding policy in ancient times until recent human history, and the mother brought the baby and fed as required. With the industrialization of the 18th and 19th century in the Western world, the mother of many urban centers began Despensing breastfeeding due to work requirements in urban Europe. Breastfeeding 1900-1960 declined significantly, due to improved hygiene, nutritional technology, and becomes negative attitude towards social skills. Nursing poncho By the 1950s, the predominant attitude to breastfeeding is that it is something practiced by the ignorant and lacking temperment of the lower classes. This skill is considered old-fashioned and "a little disgusting" left for those who can not pay infant formula and discouraged by the medical practioners and media time. [6] In fact, editorials and letters to the woman's magazine Chatelaine from 1945 as late as 1995, considered breastfeeding with a predominately negative attitude. [6] However, since the middle 1960's there was a strong resurgence in the practice of breastfeeding in Canada and the U.S., especially among the more educated, affluent women. [6] breast feeding clothes Under modern heath-care, human breast milk is considered the healthiest way of milk for the baby. [7] Breastfeeding promotes health and helps to prevent disease. [8] [9] [10] Experts agree that breastfeeding is beneficial and there are concerns about the impact of artificial formula. Artificial feeding is associated with more deaths from diarrhea in infants in both developing and developed countries. breast feeding wrap There are some exceptions, such as when the mother is taking certain drugs or infected with human T-lymphotropic virus, or has active untreated tuberculosis. In developed countries have access to infant formula and clean drinking water, maternal HIV infection is an absolute contraindication to breastfeeding (regardless of maternal HIV viral load or antiretroviral treatments) due to the risk for mother-to- child transmission of HIV.

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