Today's Date: Thursday, August 28, 2008
Women Who Breastfeed For More Than A Year Halve Their Risk Of Rheumatoid Arthritis
Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Women who breastfeed for longer have a smaller chance of getting rheumatoid arthritis, suggests a recent study.

The study also found that taking oral contraceptives, which are suspected to protect against the disease because they contain hormones that are raised in pregnancy, did not have the same effect. Also, simply having children and not breastfeeding also did not seem to be protective, said researchers.

The researchers compared 136 women with rheumatoid arthritis with 544 women of a similar age without the disease. They found that that those who had breastfed for longer were much less likely to get rheumatoid arthritis.

Women who had breastfed for 13 months or more were half as likely to get rheumatoid arthritis as those who had never breastfed. Those who had breastfed for one to 12 months were 25 percent less likely to get the disease, said researchers.

The proportion of women breast feeding for more than six months has increased dramatically over the past 30 years. The authors concluded that it was difficult to say whether there was a connection between higher rates of breastfeeding and a corresponding fall in the number of women affected by rheumatoid arthritis, but that the results of the study provided yet another reason why women should continue breastfeeding.

The study was published in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases.

For more information, please visit: www.bmj.org.

This site serves executives who are responsible for the management and administration of women's health programs. Our community includes hospital women's health managers, as well as directors and managers of women's health programs of government agencies, other healthcare organizations, health insurance plans, women's health organizations, colleges and universities and community-based organizations.

© 2005, Women's Health Professional Online

Click here to Contact Us

Free!
Subscribe to our Women's Health Professional
News Brief

Email:

Click here for more information