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Vol. 6 No. 4, October 2001
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AAP Grand Rounds 6:46-47 (2001)
© 2001 American Academy of Pediatrics

INTERNATIONAL CHILD HEALTH

Third-World Toddlers Reach New Heights With Breastfeeding

Source: Simondon KB, Simondon F, Costes R, et al. Breast-feeding is associated with improved growth in length, but not weight, in rural Senegalese toddlers. Am J Clin Nutr. 2001;73:959–967.[Abstract/Free Full Text]

The first 20% of the full text of this article appears below.

The authors report a study of breastfeeding and growth in 443 children born in the Niakhar area in central Senegal between January and October 1995. This area has been under continuous demographic surveillance since 1983 when a central database was established. The study was undertaken because of many reports that breastfed children have poorer nutrition and growth than weaned children. It has been suggested that breastfeeding beyond 12 months depresses growth and that malnourished children should be weaned by 12 months. In this study, children were recruited at 2 months of age and followed from 1.5 to 3 years of age by home visits every 6 months. The objectives were to analyze growth in toddlers by duration of breastfeeding, season, and economic level and to compare height-for-age at 3 years with duration of breastfeeding, while taking into . . . [Full Text of this Article]

Karen Olness, MD, FAAP
Pediatrics, Family Medicine and International Health, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH