Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Health

Breastfeeding Can Reduce Behavioural Disorders In Children: Study

Darpan News Desk IANS, 22 Jun, 2016 11:35 AM
    Longer durations of exclusive breastfeeding can lead to fewer behavioural disorders in children at the primary school age, finds a new study that focused on how the experiences of a child in his or her first years of life influences later behaviour and abilities.
     
    Conduct or behavioural disorders that typically start in childhood and persist into the teenage years are associated with an increase in antisocial (and potentially violent or criminal) behaviours, poor long-term mental health and low academic achievement in later life.
     
    The findings showed that children who were exclusively breastfed for the recommended first six months were approximately half as likely to have conduct disorders at the ages of 7-11 years, compared with those exclusively breastfed for less than one month.
     
    "The duration of exclusive breastfeeding of an infant has greater importance than previously realised in several areas of development," said lead author Tamsen J. Rochat of the Human Science Research Council, Durban, South Africa.
     
    "Childhood onset conduct disorders can lead to aggressive or disruptive behaviours, which interfere with learning and peer relationships, in turn leading to low self-esteem and further behavioural problems,” Rochat added.
     
    Further, children whose mothers had a current mental health problem or severe parenting stress were two-and-a-half times more likely to exhibit emotional-behavioural problems.
     
    For the research, published in PLOS Medicine, the team assessed over 1,500 children in South Africa, 900 of whom had been involved in an early infant feeding study.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Want To Enjoy Main Course? Avoid Good Appetizer

    Want To Enjoy Main Course? Avoid Good Appetizer
    A good appetizer has the potential to significantly change how the main course is enjoyed, says a study by a food science professor.

    Want To Enjoy Main Course? Avoid Good Appetizer

    Viagra Doesn't Cause Skin Cancer, Shows Study

    Viagra Doesn't Cause Skin Cancer, Shows Study
    Lifestyle factors, not Viagra, put users of erectile dysfunction drugs at higher risk of melanoma, a deadly form of skin cancer, says a study.

    Viagra Doesn't Cause Skin Cancer, Shows Study

    Smoking Linked To Breast Cancer In Young Women

    Smoking Linked To Breast Cancer In Young Women
    Smoking may increase the risk of dying early in pre-menopausal women with breast cancer, a research said.

    Smoking Linked To Breast Cancer In Young Women

    Stillbirth In First Pregnancy Ups Risk On Second Time

    Stillbirth In First Pregnancy Ups Risk On Second Time
    Women who have experienced a stillbirth have up to a four-fold increased risk of stillbirth in a second pregnancy compared to those who had an initial live birth, says a new study led by an Indian-British scientist.

    Stillbirth In First Pregnancy Ups Risk On Second Time

    Early Stage Breast Cancer Patients Getting Too Many Imaging Tests: Study

    Early Stage Breast Cancer Patients Getting Too Many Imaging Tests: Study
    Guidelines say that women diagnosed with Stage 1 or Stage 2 breast cancer don't need additional MRIs or CT scans because the risk that their cancer has spread is very low.

    Early Stage Breast Cancer Patients Getting Too Many Imaging Tests: Study

    15 Per Cent Of Kids Who Have An Anaphylactic Reaction Have Delayed 2nd Reaction

    15 Per Cent Of Kids Who Have An Anaphylactic Reaction Have Delayed 2nd Reaction
    TORONTO — A new study suggests about 15 per cent of children who have a severe allergic reaction that involves anaphylaxis can actually have a second reaction hours after the first.

    15 Per Cent Of Kids Who Have An Anaphylactic Reaction Have Delayed 2nd Reaction