If mothers go for six months of exclusive breastfeeding, 900 deaths may be avoided yearly

If mothers go for six months of exclusive breastfeeding, 900 deaths may be avoided yearly According to researchers if mothers followed the U. S. government's recommendation of six months of exclusive breastfeeding, some 900 deaths may be avoided yearly.

MedPage Today had reported that study authors Dr. Melissa Bartick of Harvard Medical School and Arnold Reinhold of the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics, both in Boston, also estimate if 90 percent of new mothers exclusively breastfed -- no water, infant food, juice, formula, cow's milk or sugar water -- infants for six months, it could save $13 billion annually.

It was also estimated by study that even 80 percent breastfeeding compliance could save $10.5 billion and prevent 741 deaths each year.

The researchers, using 2007 dollars, calculated the lack of breastfeeding cost some $4.7 billion and 447 excess deaths due to sudden infant syndrome alone.

A 2005 survey by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicated about 12 percent of U. S. mothers, breastfed exclusively for six months, 42 percent did some breastfeeding for six months and 21.5 percent did some breastfeeding after 12 months. (With Inputs from Agencies)