Breast Is Best – For Mum Too!
1 August, 2002
Breast Is Best
– For Mum Too!
World Breastfeeding Week, 1 - 7 August
2002
World Breastfeeding Week launches today, Thursday 1 August. The week is celebrated in more than 120 countries worldwide every year to highlight the health benefits of breastfeeding.
This year’s theme focuses on the reproductive health benefits of breastfeeding for mothers.
The timing of the launch coincides with the results of a study reported in The Lancet which found a direct link between breastfeeding and protection against breast cancer.
The study concluded that if mothers in the developed world breastfeed each child just six months longer than they do now, this could prevent 25,000 breast cancers worldwide each year. Extending breastfeeding by an additional twelve months could prevent 50,000 breast cancers.
Posters of Lucy Lawless breastfeeding her new baby have been developed for the week and distributed to health professionals throughout the country.
Breastfeeding helps mothers because it:
-
Significantly reduces the risk of breast cancer.
-
Provides a small reduction in the risk of the most common
ovarian cancer.
- Provides a 98% contraceptive benefit
after childbirth for 6 months, provided the mother is
exclusively or fully breastfeeding, her periods have not
returned and she is not experiencing any spotting or
bleeding.
- Assists with faster recovery from
childbirth. Women who breastfeed have less bleeding and are
less likely to become anaemic.
- Helps her return to
pre-pregnancy weight more quickly.
ENDS
For more
information, please contact:
Sally Frewin
Bona Fide
Communications
Email: sally@bonafide.co.nz.
Reference:
Collaborative Group on Hormonal Factors in Breast
Cancer. “Breast Cancer and breastfeeding: collaborative
reanalysis of individual data from 47 epidemiological
studies in 30 countries, including 50302 women with breast
cancer and 96973 women without the disease.” The Lancet.
Volume 360, Number 9328, 20 July
2002.