Posted on 03/14/2014 1:07:40 PM PDT by neverdem
Plastic baby bottles during the critical first few days of life (when mother's milk would normally carry the most important protections) could play a part... What I'm missing here - is why would this effect black women more than white women?
Long story. Cultural assimilation of formula feeding might be one. Black women by and large do not breast feed.
They’re less likely to seek preconception/prenatal care and take prenatal vitamins.
Thanks. This is so fascinating.
White women are more likely to nurse their babies rather than bottle feed them.
It was probably the other way around in the not too distant past. It was considered "modern". Even in Africa it's so considered now.
Back when fats were demonized...
These are both gummint graphs. They're quite telling when you put them on top of each other. Notice when wee REALLY started to get fat. Watch those carbs, folks!
You’ll notice as well those graphs start when they began to nudge good and hard for nationalized healthcare.
You would never get a fairly healthy fit population to agree to such a thing. You would get a fat unhealthy sickly population to agree to it however...
Just sayin’.
And what has happened to pharma profits over the time since carbs and ‘healthy whole grains’ (that are whole grains but hardly healthy) became the base of the food pyramid?
Robinson S1, Fall C.
Abstract
There is a growing recognition of the need for a lifecourse approach to understanding the aetiology of adult disease, and there is now significant evidence that links patterns of infant feeding to differences in health outcomes, both in the short and longer term. Breastfeeding is associated with lower rates of infection in infancy; in high-income populations, it is associated with reductions in blood pressure and total blood cholesterol, and lower risks of obesity and diabetes in adult life. Breastfeeding rates are suboptimal in many countries, and strategies to promote breastfeeding could therefore confer important benefits for health at a population level. However, there are particular challenges in defining nutritional exposures in infancy, including marked social gradients in initiation and duration of breastfeeding. In recent studies of low and middle-income populations of children and young adults, where the influences on infant feeding practice differ, beneficial effects of breastfeeding on blood pressure, BMI and risk of diabetes have not been confirmed, and further information is needed. Little is currently known about the long-term consequences of differences in the timing and nature of the weaning diet. Future progress will depend on new studies that provide detailed prospective data on duration and exclusivity of breastfeeding together with appropriate characterisation of the weaning diet.
Click here for full text of article.
Interesting in light of low rates of breastfeeding among black mothers.
I had a chat with the local la leche nazi when I had my youngest. She had had ONE, precisely ONE black mother who delivered at the busiest L&D unit in the nearest ‘big city’ who breastfed her baby over the past month. The rest bottlefed.
I hypothesize several reasons. Firstly, it’s not ‘convenient’ to breast feed the baby. That means you can only leave it with someone (like a mother, sister, cousin, boyfriend, whoever) for 2, mmmmmaybe 3 hrs max before you have to return. Or pump enough for the duration, also time consuming and inconvenient. Secondly, you return to fertility much sooner if you formula feed.
Just sayin’.
It not only has to do with food choice, but what manufacturers did: they lowered the fat ( "low-fat" salad dressing, mayo, cookies, etc.) and then raised the carbs (since much of it became unpalatable).
Oh, pharma wasn’t in on the beginnings of it. ADM practically wrote the food pyramid.
Pharma hasn’t exactly been complaining about the results to their bottom line however.
If most people low carbed the need for statins would be close to zero. ditto bp meds, and likely most ‘psych’ meds for all but the complete wackos (not counting schizo/etc in this one, talking about the ‘depressed’ people).
Not to mention all the cardiovascular clinics that have sprung up.
And I suspect the cancer rates are related to this as well. Cancers (and bugs) love sugar.
"According to the latest numbers from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, breastfeeding rates improved nationwide in 2000-2008, and some of the greatest improvement was among black women. However, only about 59 percent of black mothers breastfed in 2008, compared to 80 percent of Hispanic mothers and about 75 percent of white mothers. For 2008 rates of breastfeeding at a babys first birthday, the number was about 23 percent overall but only 12.5 percent for black mothers. That low rate still marks a near doubling of rates among black mothers compared to the year 2000."
The above was from here.
Yes...no argument on what you said here.
Thanks for the links and information.
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