Adult Years
Lactation/Breastfeeding
| According to the American Academy of Pediatrics, breast milk is the best food for infants throughout the first year of life. |
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Your healthy lifestyle while breastfeeding:
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The Best Nourishment You Can Give Baby
Health care experts agree that breastfeeding is the best way to feed your baby during the first year. Breastfeeding is a skill which must be learned.
Breast milk is nature's perfect food for babies. It is easily digested and contains all the nutrients, including iron, that full-term babies need in the first 6 months of life. Breast milk also helps protect babies against illnesses and food allergies as they get older. It contains living cells that not only make protective antibodies but can also destroy disease causing bacteria and viruses in infants. Studies have shown that babies who nurse have less colic and diarrhea, and fewer colds and ear infections. Even a short period of breastfeeding will help your baby.
Breast milk contains the perfect amount and type of fat for your baby's nutrition and development, and plays an important role in the development of your baby's eyes, brain and central nervous system. The fat content of breast milk actually changes throughout the day in response to baby's needs. It also changes as your baby gets older. At night, your breast milk contains more fat than earlier in the day, which may help your baby sleep for longer periods at night.
Breastfeeding is good for mothers, too
Breastfeeding gives you the perfect opportunity to cuddle your baby, sending baby a wonderful message of your love. At the same time, it makes feeding easier and helps you get in shape.
- No need to shop for infant formula and prepare bottles
- Nursing helps your uterus return to its normal size. When you nurse, your body makes hormones that cause the muscles of your uterus to contract, making the uterus smaller and firmer.
- Breastfeeding helps you lose weight naturally. Your body used the extra body fat gained during your pregnancy as a caloric reserve to be used up while nursing. Breastfeeding may burn as many as 400 calories a day.












