AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to analyze the rates of cross-breastfeeding, human milk donation to milk banks, and the reception of milk from these banks among Brazilian mothers.
  • Using data from the Brazilian National Survey on Child Nutrition (ENANI-2019), researchers focused on 5,831 mothers of children under two years who had breastfed, finding that 21.1% practiced cross-breastfeeding.
  • Although 4.8% of mothers donated milk and 3.6% reported their children received donated milk, cross-breastfeeding poses health risks, highlighting the need for discussion around these practices in Brazil and globally.

Article Abstract

The objective of this study was to describe the frequency of cross-breastfeeding, human milk donation to human milk banks and reception of human milk from human milk banks, and to investigate the intersection between cross-breastfeeding and breast milk donation practices. This study used data from the national household-based survey Brazilian National Survey on Child Nutrition (ENANI-2019), which collected information from 14,558 children < 5 years old between February 2019 and March 2020. The present study included data from 5,831 biological mothers who reported having breastfed their child < 2 years old at least once and replied questions about cross-breastfeeding, donation and recaption of human milk to human milk banks. Prevalence and 95% confidence intervals (95%CI) were estimated for each stratifier, considering the study complex sample design. Among mothers of children < 2 years old who breastfed their child at least once, 21.1% practiced cross-breastfeeding; breastfeeding another child was more frequent (15.6%) than allowing a child to be breastfed by another woman (11.2%). Among this population, 4.8% of women donated human milk to a human milk bank, and 3.6% reported that their children had received donated human milk. The donation of human milk is a practice recommended by the Brazilian Ministry of Health and has the potential to save thousands of newborns throughout Brazil. In contrast, cross-breastfeeding is contraindicated due to the potential risk of transmitting HIV. There is a need for a broad debate on these practices in Brazil and worldwide.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10552617PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1590/0102-311XEN082322DOI Listing

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