Ισραηλινή έρευνα για τον θηλασμό μειώνει τις πιθανότητες για παιδικό καρκίνο

Ισραηλινή έρευνα για τον θηλασμό

  •   ειώνει τις πιθανότητες για παιδικό καρκίνο
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    Ο θηλασμός μειώνει τις πιθανότητες για παιδικό καρκίνο - Έρευνα του Πανεπιστημίου της Χάιφα στο Ισραήλ έδειξε πως ο θηλασμός για τουλάχιστον 6 μήνες, μειώνει τις πιθανότητες για παιδική λευχαιμία και λεμφώματος κατά 19%. 

    A new Israeli meta-analysis proves the hypothesis that breastfeeding lowers the risk of developing childhood cancers.

    According to researchers at the University of Haifa, children who nurse for at least six months have a 19 percent lower possibility of developing childhood leukemia or lymphoma than infants who breastfed for a shorter period or not at all.

    “The main hypothesis of the study, that breastfeeding is associated with a lower risk of childhood leukemia and lymphoma, has been fully corroborated by the study results,” Dr. Efrat Amitay of the University of Haifa’s School of Public Health, writes in the university’s newsletter.

    The new study was based on earlier research by Amitay and Dr. Lital Keinan-Boker, deputy director of the Health Ministry’s Center for Disease Control. In 2014, they published a study (funded by the Israel Cancer Association) on the link between breastfeeding and cancer rates. In that study, they concluded that breastfeeding decreases children’s chances of developing cancer by 60 percent.

    They collaborated again on the latest meta-analysis study, recently published in JAMA Pediatrics.

    “There is a strong inverse association between breastfeeding and childhood leukemia and lymphoma, with a clear dose-response effect,” Amitay writes. “Nutrition is essential to health and breastfeeding is deemed the gold standard of infant nutrition with many health benefits, including lower risks for many childhood illnesses; the results of this study add evidence to the protective effect of breastfeeding also against childhood leukemia and lymphoma.”

    Every year in Israel some 400 children are diagnosed with cancer, according to the Israel Cancer Association. In the United States, some 16,000 children and adolescents are diagnosed with cancer, according to the National Cancer Institute. Globally, the most prevalent childhood cancer is leukemia (cancer of the blood).

    The latest research from the University of Haifa is actually a meta-analysis of 18 previous studies comprising 28,000 subjects from over half a century from around the world.​


    http://www.israel21c.org/breastfeeding-reduces-childhood-cancer/ 

     
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