The longer babies breastfeed, the more they achieve in life – major study
Brazilian study of 6,000 babies from all backgrounds since 1982 finds
those who breastfed were more intelligent, spent longer in education
and earned more
Children who had been breastfed for 12 months had an IQ that was four
points higher than those breastfed for less than a month, researchers
found. Photograph: Getty Images
Breastfed babies are more likely to turn into well-educated and higher-earning adults, according to a major long-term study.
Researchers in Brazil
have followed nearly 6,000 babies from birth for the past three
decades, enabling them for the first time to get an idea of the
long-term effects of breastfeeding. Nearly 3,500 of them, now
30-year-old adults, accepted an invitation to be interviewed and sit IQ
tests for the purpose of the study. Those who had been breastfed proved
to be more intelligent, had spent longer at school and earned more than
those who had not been. And the longer they were breastfed as a baby,
the better they tended to be doing.
It is already known that breastfeeding can increase a child’s IQ by a
small amount. The question that Dr Bernardo Lessa Horta from the
Federal University of Pelotas in Brazil wanted to answer was whether
this translated into greater intelligence and better prospects as an
adult.
“Our study provides the first evidence that prolonged breastfeeding
not only increases intelligence until at least the age of 30 years but
also has an impact both at an individual and societal level by improving
educational attainment and earning ability,” he said.
The study found babies who had been breastfed for six months, as
recommended by the WHO, got most of the benefits enjoyed by those who
were fed for longer. Photograph: Katie Collins/PA
It is not just the age of the participants that makes this study
unusual. Horta says it is free of the major complication of most
breastfeeding studies because, when it began in 1982, it was not just
the more affluent and educated mothers who breastfed in Brazil. Breastfeeding
was not limited to one socio-economic group. It was, he says, evenly
distributed across the social classes. So the higher achievers at the
age of 30 did not come from better-off homes.
Nonetheless, in analysing their results, now published in the Lancet Global Health journal
, they took account of family income at birth, parental schooling,
genomic ancestry, maternal smoking during pregnancy, maternal age,
birthweight and type of delivery to try to avoid any of those factors
skewing the results.
They found that all the breastfed babies had greater intelligence, as
measured by a standard IQ test, had spent more years in education and
had higher earnings. But the longer they had been breastfed, the greater
the benefits. Children who had been breastfed for 12 months had an IQ
that was four points higher than those breastfed for less than a month,
had nearly a year’s more schooling and earned around £70 a month more –
about a third more than the average income level.
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Horta
acknowledged he could not completely rule out the possibility mothers
who breastfed helped their babies’ development in other ways. “Some
people say it is not the effect of breastfeeding but it is the mothers
who breastfeed who are different in their motivation or their ability to
stimulate the kids,” he told the Guardian.
But, he said, there is evidence from other studies of the nutritional
value of mother’s milk, rich in long-chain polyunsaturated acids that
are essential for brain growth. Some studies have suggested babies with a
particular genotype are more likely to get the IQ benefit from
breastfeeding than others. Horta and colleagues are now looking to see
whether that applies in their cohort.
Exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months is recommended by
the World Health Organisation. Horta said babies who had been breastfed
for six months got most of the benefits enjoyed by those who were fed
for longer. “Mothers should breastfeed for as long as possible,” he
said, but he recognised that extended breastfeeding is not always easy
for women. Less than a quarter of new mothers in the UK are still
exclusively breastfeeding by the time the baby is six weeks old.
Dr Colin Michie, chair of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child
Health’s nutrition committee, said: “It’s widely known that breastfed
babies are better protected against chest and ear infections, are at
less risk of sudden infant death and are less likely to become obese,
but it’s interesting to see the benefits of breastfeeding for a
prolonged period of time not only benefit the baby in the early years,
but also translate into increased intelligence and improved earning
ability later in life.
“It is important to note that breastfeeding is one of many factors
that can contribute to a child’s outcomes, however, this study
emphasises the need for continued and enhanced breastfeeding promotion
so expectant mothers are aware of the benefits of breastfeeding.
Furthermore, once mothers have given birth, we must ensure they are
properly supported to continue breastfeeding for as long as they are
able to.”
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