| Breastfeeding  
Ibrahim B. Syed, 
Ph. D. President
 Islamic Research Foundation International, Inc.
 7102 W. Shefford Lane
 Louisville, KY 40242-6462, USA
 E-mail: 
IRFI@INAME.COM
 Website:  
http://WWW.IRFI.ORG
   We read in the Qur'an the 
following verse:  "Mothers shall suckle their children 
for two whole years; (that is) for those who wish to complete suckling……." - 
Surah, Al-Baqara (The Cow): 233(Verse #). 
 This is a Qur'anic command for 
the mothers to suckle (breastfeed) their children for a period of two years. 
This command is modified by the subsequent words " (that is) for those who wish 
to complete suckling." Obeying the Qur'anic command is an Ibaada (worship). The 
wisdom of breastfeeding the children has been instilled in the Muslims through 
this Qur'anic revelations. Those who followed this Qur'anic command raised 
mentally and physically healthy Muslim children. Alhamdulillah.  
 The following article gives us 
the opportunity to think and appreciate this Qur'anic wisdom. In the Western 
world, majority of the children are raised by drinking "formula" milk. Some are 
of the opinion that the mothers in the West are refusing to breastfeed their 
children to maintain their youthful figure. Now let us see what the Western 
studies reveal with regard to breastfeeding the children.   Many epidemiologic studies 
reported over the years suggest that breastfeeding reduces the risk of infection 
and atopic disease in the breastfed infant and child. The United States Surgeon 
General released in October 2000, the Blueprint for Action on 
Breastfedeing, (HHS Blueprint for Action on Breastfeeding. 
Washington, DC: Dept of Health and Human Services, Office on Women's Health; 
2000) which spells out the strategic plan for the country to 
improve the percentage of women who breastfeed and the duration of that 
breastfeeding. The health goals of the United States for 2010 include having: 
 
	
	at least 75 % of mothers 
	leave the hospital breastfeeding and 
	
	at least 50 % of women 
	breastfeeding at 6 months and 25 % at 1 year postpartum(after delivery). 
	 The American Academy of 
Pediatrics recommends that women breastfeed exclusively for 6 months and 
continues breastfeeding while adding weaning foods for at least a year and then 
for as long thereafter as mother and infant wish.   In a very recent article titled " 
The Promotion of Breastfeeding Intervention Trial (PROBIT) - A Randomized Trial 
in the Republic of Belarus" published in the Journal of the American Medical 
Association (JAMA, January 24/31, 2001--Vol 285, No.4 pp.413-420), which is 
considered as masterful study of more than 17,000 mother-infant pairs recruited 
from the maternity hospital and polyclinics in the Republic of Belarus. The real 
and clear message of this study is that breastfeeding, especially prolonged 
breastfeeding, affects child health, particularly in the area of 
gastrointestinal infections and atopic eczema in the first year of life. This 
study confirms previously held impressions that breastfeeding is protective 
against acute problems in infancy, namely gastrointestinal and allergic 
diseases. Existing epidemiologic data suggest breastfeeding protects against 
childhood cancers, Crohn disease and celiac disease.   New research, published in The Lancet - 
a British Medical Journal (Vol. 357, of Feb. 10, 2001, pp. 413-419) suggests 
that babies fed infant formula grow up to have higher blood pressure than those 
given breast milk. The scientists found that the diastolic blood pressure 
reading- the lower number- was 3.2 points lower in the teens fed breast milk 
than in those given pre-term formula. The systolic reading - the higher number - 
was 2.7 points lower. An elevation in either reading is bad. Major American 
heart disease studies have found that if adults' diastolic blood pressure was 
lowered just two points, the prevalence of high blood pressure would drop by 17 
percent, the risk of heart disease and heart attacks would drop by 15 percent. " 
The most likely thing is there is something in breast milk that protects," Lucas 
said. (Alan Lucas is a co-author of the article along with Atul Singhal and Tim 
J Cole). Studies in the 1990s have shown that breast milk is associated with 
improved intelligence quotient, and cognitive development. On the other hand 
early childhood anemia is associated with mild or moderate mental retardation. Consumption of human milk has 
been shown to have many benefits for infants-both preterm and full 
term-including a reduced risk of necrotising enterocolitis, atopy, and infection 
and improved later cognitive development. The breastmilk contains a wide range 
of non-nutrient factors, including trophic substances and hormones that are 
responsible for the beneficial effects of human milk.   |