Children
breastfeeding after first birthday should take vitamin D
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[February 19, 2016]
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters Health) – Children who breastfeed,
especially those living far from the equator, may get too little vitamin
D, according to a new study in Canada.
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The longer children breastfed, even if they also ate solid food or
were older than one year, the greater their odds of having low
levels of vitamin D, researchers found.
Breast milk does not provide enough vitamin D, particularly for
people in northern parts of the world, so the Canadian Paediatric
Society recommends that breastfed children take supplements
containing 400 International Units of vitamin D every day for the
first year of life.
“We’re not saying that breastfeeding is not a really great source of
nutrition, but up here in the northern parts of the world not much
vitamin D passes through breast milk,” said study coauthor Dr.
Jonathon Maguire, a pediatrician and researcher at St. Michael's
Hospital in Toronto.
The World Health Organization recommends exclusive breastfeeding
through the first six months of life and continuing it in addition
to solid foods for the first and second years as mutually desired by
mother and child.
Maguire and his coauthors studied how long children were breastfed
and their blood vitamin D levels using data from about 2,500 healthy
children aged 1 to 5 years in Toronto. Mothers reported how long
their child had been breastfed and doctors collected blood samples
from the children.
Mothers also reported whether their child was taking vitamin D
supplements.
Half of the kids had been breastfed for 10 months or more, and 53%
received vitamin D supplements.
As breastfeeding duration increased, blood vitamin D levels
decreased for children who did not take supplements. For every one
month additional breastfeeding time, the odds of abnormally low
vitamin D levels increased by 6%, the researchers report in the
American Journal of Public Health, online February 18.
The pattern was so consistent that researchers predicted 16% of
2-year-olds breastfeeding but not receiving extra vitamin D would be
seriously deficient, and by age 3, that would rise to 29%.
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For children who did take supplements, breastfeeding duration was
not tied to vitamin D levels.
These results support the American Academy of Pediatrics
recommendation of vitamin D supplements during breastfeeding,
regardless of duration, Maguire said.
Just because a child has reached a year of age doesn’t mean vitamin
D supplementation can be stopped, he said.
The supplements are available in most drugstores, but parents may
forget to buy them, he said.
“Probably most North American pregnant women get vitamin D
supplements during pregnancy, even if this is not a very substantial
amount,” Martin Hewison of The University of Birmingham in the U.K.
told Reuters Health by email.
“Vitamin D-deficiency is so very common during pregnancy and
lactation but is still generally ignored unless the child develops
rickets,” said Hewison, who was not part of the new study.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Lw1TtW
Am J Public Health 2016.
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