Nicotine, Tobacco Research Breastfeeding could reduce risk of mothers smoking again, study says
The study says, in estimation, 70% of women who quit smoking when pregnant relapse within the first year of giving birth.
Source:Dimeji Akinloye: pulse.ng, re-posted by Abdulgafar Esho (www.econsforumnews.blogspot.com)
A new study suggests that breastfeeding could help prevent a relapse into old habits.
The study, published in Nicotine & Tobacco Research,
set out to examine changes in smoking from the first prenatal
appointment through 9 months postpartum among 168 women who smoked
during their pregnancy.
According to the study
authors, an estimated 70% of women who quit smoking when pregnant
relapse within the first year of giving birth. Approximately 67% of
these resume smoking within three months and up to 90% are estimated to
relapse within 6 months.
Smoking during pregnancy
may cause a number of health problems for an unborn child as the baby is
exposed to harmful chemicals such as carbon monoxide that limit its
supply of oxygen and nutrients. These problems include premature birth,
birth defects and pregnancy loss.
Pregnant mothers
who smoke can also increase the risk of several health problems
affecting a baby after they are born, such as asthma, childhood obesity
and Sudden Infant Death Dyndrome (SIDS). The dangers of smoking do not vanish after pregnancy, however, and resuming smoking habits can be dangerous.
"Increase
in tobacco consumption after the birth of a child may have harmful
effects on both the mother, and the infant who is at higher risk of
exposure to environmental tobacco smoke," an author of the study from
the University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Shannon Shisler, states.
For
the study, the researchers obtained data on maternal smoking that was
verified through analysis of saliva samples. For each participant,
interviews were conducted throughout the duration of the study,
assessing breastfeeding, use of other substances and partner smoking as
potential predictors of changes in smoking habits.
They
found that by 9 months after giving birth, the women had returned to
over half their levels of tobacco consumption prior to conception. "Although
women decreased their tobacco consumption across their pregnancy, by 9
months postpartum they had substantially increased their smoking," Shisler says.
However,
one predictor was found that indicated significant changes in smoking
patterns from pregnancy to 9 months postpartum. The researchers found
that women who breastfed their babies for at least 90 days smoked far
less than women who did not breastfeed or only breastfed for a short
time.
Shisler suggests that breastfeeding could be used to help lower the risk of postpartum smoking relapses:
"Breastfeeding
seems to be a protective factor against increases in smoking after
childbirth, so interventions should educate women about breastfeeding to
maximize effectiveness. Supporting women through at least 3 months of
breastfeeding may have long-term benefits in terms of smoking
reduction."
Smoking can potentially decrease a
mother's production of milk and contaminate breast milk with harmful
chemicals. These reasons may explain a reluctance in breastfeeding
mothers to start smoking again after pregnancy.
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