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  • NM Dept. Of Health Recommends Breastfeeding After Infant Dies Of Rare Illness

    12/05/2008 6:47:37 PM PST · by Oyarsa · 15 replies · 641+ views
    LAS CRUCES, N.M. -- A New Mexico infant is dead and another is getting treatment at a hospital for a rare illness called enterobacter sakazakii. The New Mexico Department of Health said the illness is sometimes associated with baby formula. A baby boy in Otero County has died from the bloodstream and central nervous system infection. Now the state is advising safe ways to feed infants, including breastfeeding. “We're doing lab tests right now we're working with the Centers for Disease Control, and the Food and Drug Administration to look at every possible avenue. Right now it hasn't been linked...
  • Nursing mom says plane kicked her off

    11/15/2006 6:38:55 PM PST · by Mr. Brightside · 252 replies · 3,627+ views
    Yahoo ^ | 11/15/06
    Nursing mom says plane kicked her off Wed Nov 15, 1:22 PM ET BURLINGTON, Vt. - A woman who claims she was kicked off an airplane because she was breast-feeding her baby has filed a complaint against two airlines, her attorney said. Emily Gillette, 27, of Santa Fe, N.M., filed the complaint with the Vermont Human Rights Commission late last week against Delta Air Lines and Freedom Airlines, said her attorney, Elizabeth Boepple. Freedom was operating the Delta flight between Burlington and New York City. Gillette said she was discreetly breast-feeding her 22-month-old daughter on Oct. 13 as their flight...
  • Risk: How a Baby May Save Your Joints

    11/12/2004 8:08:41 PM PST · by neverdem · 82 replies · 3,041+ views
    NY Times ^ | November 9, 2004 | ERIC NAGOURNEY
    VITAL SIGNS Women who breast-feed have a lower risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis, even decades later, researchers have found. And the longer they nurse their babies, the smaller the risk becomes. The findings grow out of the long-term Nurses' Health Study, which has followed the health of more than 120,000 women since 1976. The study, led by Dr. Elizabeth W. Karlson of Brigham and Women's Hospital, a Harvard affiliate, appears in the current issue of Arthritis & Rheumatism. Rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune disease that can destroy the joints, affects women much more often than it does men. Some scientists have...