Breastfeeding and Health Outcomes for Infants and Children: A Systematic Review
Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research · Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute · +2 more institutions
Abstract
Review the evidence on the association between breastfeeding and child health outcomes. DATA SOURCES: Systematic literature searches in MEDLINE, Embase, and CINAHL for English-language articles published from 2006 to August 14, 2024. STUDY SELECTION: Existing systematic reviews (ESRs) and primary studies comparing various breastfeeding exposures and child health outcomes among term infants in developed countries. DATA EXTRACTION: Abstracted data on study design, demographics, breastfeeding exposures and referents, and outcomes. Results of ESRs were synthesized alongside those of newer primary studies.
Twenty-nine ESRs and 145 primary studies were included. An association indicating a reduced risk from more vs less breastfeeding was apparent for moderate-to-severe respiratory and gastrointestinal infections, otitis media, allergic rhinitis, asthma, malocclusion, inflammatory bowel disease, type 1 diabetes, rapid weight gain and growth, obesity, high systolic blood pressure, childhood leukemia, and infant mortality. There was no clear threshold of breastfeeding duration that appeared to be most beneficial for any outcome. There were few data on whether associations varied by mode of breastfeeding or source of breast milk.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.77
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 203
Authors
6- CDCarrie D. PatnodeCorresponding
Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research
- NBNora B. Henrikson
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute
- EMElizabeth M. Webber
Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research
- PRPaula R. Blasi
Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute
- CACaitlyn A Senger
Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Breastfeeding
- CINAHL
- Breast feeding
- Observational study
- MEDLINE
- Breast milk
- Pediatrics