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Ethologists

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Title: Ethologists


1
Ethologists Earth MothersResearch
Controversy on Extended Breastfeeding
  • Kathleen Kendall-Tackett, Ph.D.
  • Family Research Laboratory
  • University of New Hampshire

2
Breastfeeding in Worldwide Perspective
(Dettwyler, 1995)
  • Breastfeeding is biological and heavily
    culturalized, modified by a wide variety of
    beliefs about
  • infant health and nutrition
  • nature of human infancy
  • proper relationship between mother and child
  • personal autonomy and independence

3
Era of Science as Savior
  • Elimination of old wives tales
  • Male experts and authorities
  • High-tech better than low-tech
  • Approaches developed to improve on nature
  • Elimination of useless organs
  • Locating active ingredient in plant-based
    treatments
  • Formula to replace breastmilk

4
Scientific Health
  • The effect on womens health
  • medicalization of childbirth
  • episiotomy and forceps
  • length of labor restricted
  • outlaw midwifery
  • outlaw or discredit herbal medicine and other
    approaches

5
Scientific Parenting Style
  • Scheduled and timed feedings
  • Breastfeeding short-term, if at all
  • Emphasis on early independence
  • Sleeping separate from parents
  • Reliance on experts for advice
  • Dominant American style

6
Scientific Parenting and Breastfeeding
  • Scientific approach was a disaster for
    breastfeeding
  • Failure of basic breastfeeding management
  • Spaced and timed feedings
  • Early supplementation
  • Early introduction of bottle
  • Practitioners often unable to solve simple
    problems
  • Lack of early follow-up
  • Led to insufficient milk supply

7
Attachment Theory (Ainsworth Bowlby, 1991)
  • Attachment between parent and child is promoted
    by proximity and maternal/caregiver
    responsiveness.
  • Based on evolutionary theory, genetically based
    behaviors to promote proximity include crying,
    sucking, smiling, clinging and following.
    Separation activates these behaviors.

8
Intuitive (Attachment) Style
  • Breastfeeding on demand
  • Extended breastfeeding
  • Meeting dependency needs
  • Co-sleeping
  • Baby wearing, close proximity
  • Mother as expert. Wisdom passed mother to mother.

9
  • Male physicians, who have no idea what
    motherhood is like, have cowed women for decades
    into doing unnatural and destructive things.
  • Robert Wright (1997)

10
World Health Organization (1990)
  • WHO Recommended breastfeeding for up to two
    years and beyond for infants worldwide.

11
American Academy of Pediatrics (1997)
  • AAP recent statement in support of breastfeeding
    recommended breastfeeding for the first year and
    as long thereafter as is mutually desired.
  • Sugarman Kendall-Tackett (1995)

12
American Association for the Advancement of
Science (1992)
  • Is attachment parenting adaptive for humans?
  • increased infant survival
  • decreased infant illness and morbidity
  • improved maternal health
  • the natural or dominant style

13
Hypothesis 1
  • Attachment parenting decreases infant mortality.
  • Historical review
  • Premature babies
  • SIDS

14
Historical Review(Stuart-MacAdam, 1995)
  • 99.9 of our existence on earth, all human babies
    were breastfed (either by mother or wet-nurse).
  • No safe alternative.
  • Still true in many countries today.

15
Historical Review
  • Dublin Foundling Hospital (1775-1779). 10,272
    babies admitted, 45 survived. Mortality rate of
    99.6.
  • 15th century, no breastfeeding in Germany,
    Bohemia, Austrian Tirol, Finland, Iceland or
    Russia. 50 infant mortality rate.

16
Historical Review
  • Woodbury (1925) study in 8 American cities
    (N22,422). Mortality rates for bottle-fed
    babies
  • 3 times higher, first month
  • 4 times higher, second month
  • 6 times higher, third month
  • 5 times higher, fourth to seventh month

17
Still true today
  • World Health Organization estimates that 1
    million babies per year die as a result of not
    breastfeeding.

18
Conditions that Influence the Safety of Bottle
Feeding (Palmer, 1988)
  • Access to Safe Water
  • An Uncontaminated Environment
  • Fuel to Boil Water and Refrigerate
  • Money to Purchase Formula
  • Literacy to Understand Preparation Instructions
  • Access to Medical Care

19
Premature Babies in Columbia
  • Death rate for premature babies in Columbia 70
  • Many babies abandoned.
  • No incubators. Hospital temps around 50 degrees.

20
Kangaroo Care
  • Developed by neonatologists Edgar Rey Hector
    Martinez in Bogota, Columbia
  • Babies worn by mothers and fathers.

21
Effects of Kangaroo Care (Ludington-Hoe, 1993)
  • Heart rate stabilizes
  • Respiratory rate better. Fewer episodes of apnea.
  • Oxygen saturation at normal levels
  • Skin color better (more pink)
  • Body temperature stabilizes
  • Babies more alert, less crying
  • Breastfeeding more likely. Moms produce more
    milk.
  • Earlier hospital discharge
  • Mothers and fathers feel more confident

22
Sleep and Arousal Deficiency (McKenna Bernshaw,
1995)
  • Humans evolved under conditions of high degree of
    dependence on caregiver.
  • low levels of fat and protein in human breast
    milk
  • infantile neurological immaturity at birth
  • slow postnatal growth

23
SIDS and Arousal Deficiency
  • McKenna Mesko (1993)
  • Mother/baby sleep/arousal cycles are synchronized
  • Babies spend less time in deep stages of sleep,
    the most difficult to arouse from
  • Co-sleeping creates more variable physiological
    experiences for infant
  • Increased variation may lead to greater
    maturational synchrony among infants sub-systems

24
Co-sleeping and SIDS
  • Co-sleeping is an evolutionary ancient
    arrangement, one humans adapted under.
  • In countries where co-sleeping occurs as a
    favored and elected childcare pattern, rates of
    SIDS are the lowest in the world. For example,
    Japan .15/1000

25
Hypothesis 2
  • Attachment parenting leads to a decrease in
    infant illness and morbidity.

26
Benefits to Babies
  • Human milk uniquely suited for human infants
  • Easy to digest and contains all nutrients that
    babies need
  • Protects against a wide variety of illnesses for
    as long as they breastfeed
  • Fatty acids, unique to human milk, may play a
    role in infant brain and visual development

27
bLower Risk of Infection (American Academy of
Pediatrics, 1997)
  • Diarrhea
  • Otitis Media
  • Bacteremia
  • Bacterial Meningitis
  • Botulism
  • Urinary Tract Infection
  • Necrotizing enterocolitis

28
Fewer Respiratory Problems (AAP, 1997)
  • Less respiratory illness including bronchitis and
    pneumonia.
  • Lower risk of childhood asthma
  • Fewer allergies, including fatal shock

29
Fewer Digestive Diseases (AAP, 1997)
  • Insulin-dependent Diabetes Mellitus
  • Crohns disease
  • Ulcerative colitis
  • GI allergies (celiac disease, allergic colitis)

30
Lower Lifetime Cardiovascular Risk
  • Breastmilk has a beneficial effect on serum Lp(a)
    concentration in infants. Earliest precursors of
    arteriosclerosis (Routi, 1995)
  • In healthy adolescents, those with short duration
    of breastfeeding (lt6 months) or early
    introduction of formula, had higher mean values
    of total serum cholesterol than those breastfed
    longer than 6 months (Bergstrom, 1995)

31
Other Long-term Effects
  • Breastfeeding decreases later risk of breast
    cancer for breastfed children (Freudenheim et
    al., 1994)
  • Lower cancer risk for offspring when mothers
    consume soy products. These protective factors
    are more bio-available through human milk (Davis,
    Savitz Graubard, 1988)
  • Lower risk for lymphomas, especially Hodgkins
    lymphoma (Shu et al., 1995)

32
Emotional Benefits (Anisfeld et al., 1990)
  • A study of the effect of baby-wearing on
    attachment in low-SES inner-city mothers
  • At 3 months, the mothers were more contingently
    responsive
  • At 13 months, the infants were more likely to be
    securely attached
  • Maternal responsivity in the early months led to
    less crying and more secure attachments
    (Ainsworth Bowlby, 1991)

33
Hypothesis 3
  • Mothers experience health benefits from extended
    breastfeeding and attachment parenting.

34
Benefits to Mothers
  • Breastfeeding helps mothers recover from
    childbirth
  • Shrinks uterus to pre-pregnancy state and reduces
    amount of blood lost
  • Mothers lose more weight the first 3 to 6 months.
    Postpartum obesity is less common
  • Menstrual cycles resume 20 to 30 weeks later
  • Mothers with gestational diabetes who lactate
    decrease their risk of later Type II diabetes

35
Benefits to Mothers (AAP, 1997)
  • Breastfeeding keeps women healthier throughout
    their lives.
  • Is important in child spacing
  • Reduces risks of breast, endometrial, and ovarian
    cancers
  • May reduce risk of osteoporosis
  • Reduces mothers total cholesterol, LDL, and
    triglycerides, while HDL remains high

36
Benefits to Mothers
  • Lactating mothers have better responses to stress
  • Breastfeeding women produce lower levels of
    stress hormones than do women who bottle feed
  • Inverse relationship between oxytocin and levels
    of anxiety and depression (Altemus et al., 1995)

37
Suppression of Fertility (Ellison, 1995)
  • In study of !Kung, frequency of nipple
    stimulation is crucial. Prolactin levels
    chronically high, keeping estradiol and
    progesterone suppressed
  • When nursing intervals are widely spaced,
    prolactin levels are transient and separated by
    long periods of circulating hormones. Not
    significantly different from non-lactating women

38
Breastfeeding and Population
  • Breastfeeding helps reduce world overpopulation
  • Breastfeeding highly effective means of
    contraception, especially in third world
  • Limits fertility, creating greater birth spacing
  • Breastfeeding credited with preventing an average
    of 4 births/woman in Africa and 6.5 births/woman
    in Bangladesh

39
Environmental Waste
  • For every 3 million bottle-fed babies..
  • 450,000 million tins of formula are used
  • 70,000 tons of metal are discarded
  • These metals are not recycled in developing
    countries

40
Hypothesis 4
  • Attachment parenting is the dominant pattern
  • in history
  • in other cultures

41
Weaning in History (Stuart-MacAdam, 1995)
  • Babylon (3000 BC) specified nursing for 2 to 3
    years
  • Hebrews (Torah) Weaning at 3 years
  • Egyptian papyrus, weaning at 3 years
  • India. Medical texts in Ayurvedic period (1500 to
    800 BC) recommend only breast milk for first
    year, breast milk and solids for second year,
    gradual weaning after that.

42
Weaning in History
  • Byzantium (400 to 700 BC), weaning 20 months to 2
    years
  • Quran Islamic children should be breastfed at
    least 2 years
  • Talmud (536 BC), babies are to be put to breast
    immediately and suckled 18 months to 2 years

43
Weaning Ages in Modern Preindustrial or Rural
Communities (Wickes, 1953)
  • Samoans, 1 yr
  • Australian aborigines, 2-3 yrs
  • Greenlanders, 3-4 yrs
  • Hawaiians, 5 yrs
  • Inuit, 7 yrs

44
Modern Rural African Communities (Fildes, 1986)
  • Gambia, 21 months
  • Ivory Coast, 42 months
  • Northern Sudan, 2 to 3 years
  • Morocco Algeria, at least 2 years
  • Pakistan, 92 still breastfeeding at 2 years

45
Hominid Blueprint for the Natural Age of
Weaning (Dettwyler, 1995)
  • What life-history variables are associated with
    weaning in non-human primates?
  • Weaning according to tripling or quadrupling of
    birth weight
  • Quadruple weight better estimate for large-bodied
    mammals. 27 mos for males, 30 mos for females

46
Hominid Blueprint (2)
  • Weaning according to attainment of one-third of
    adult weight
  • 4 to 7 years for humans, with boys nursed longer
    than girls
  • Weaning according to adult body size
  • 2.8 to 3.7 years, depending on average adult
    female body weight

47
Hominid Blueprint (3)
  • Weaning according to gestation length
  • Affected by adult size
  • A minimum of six times gestational age
  • 4.5 years
  • Weaning according to dental eruption
  • Weaning at eruption of first permanent molars.
    5.5 to 6.5 years in modern humans

48
  • The nursing patterns adopted in modern Western
    settings are, in fact, largely a cultural
    aberration. By imposing them, we are simply
    testing the infants ability to adapt his or her
    pattern of feeding to the extremes that the
    culture has sought to impose. The message should
    therefore be--Stop doing it!
  • Michael Woolridge

49
Extended Breastfeeding in the US(Sugarman
Kendall-Tackett, 1995)
50
Extended Breastfeeding in the US
  • American women are practicing extended
    breastfeeding and attachment parenting.
  • Secret or closet nursing. Strangers were
    category most negative toward long-term
    breastfeeding (Kendall-Tackett Sugarman, 1995)
  • Most women never tell their doctors.
  • An issue in custody disputes. Failure to wean
    in a timely manner seen as cause for removal.

51
What We Can Learn from Earth Mothers.
  • We can learn the full range of nursing behavior
    and weaning ages in our culture.
  • We can learn about behaviors that build and
    sustain an adequate milk supply (or which
    behaviors may lead to premature weaning).

52
What We Can Learn, contd
  • We can broaden our perspective past our own
    experience and view breastfeeding in a global
    context.
  • We can understand the importance of support from
    other women and partners in sustaining a socially
    stigmatized behavior.
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