母乳是最好的。

K. Saroja
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在世界各地,由于越来越多的科学证据支持,“最好的牛奶是母乳”这一概念正在获得动力。在印度,即使营养状况不佳的普通母亲也有能力长时间母乳喂养婴儿,有时会延长到近2岁。母乳通常是印度贫困婴儿膳食蛋白质的唯一来源,如果没有母乳,贫困婴儿和儿童的营养状况会比现在糟糕得多。母乳对经济和健康的积极影响是显而易见的;这是母亲能为婴儿提供的最卫生、最安全、最合适的营养。最近,在印度普通母亲中出现了一种不幸的趋势,即人工喂养。这种做法在农村母亲和社会经济地位较低群体的母亲中蔓延。由于贫穷和无知,许多母亲既不能卫生地配制人工母乳喂养配方,也不能很好地喂养孩子,孩子们不仅被剥夺了必需的营养,而且还暴露在不必要的肠道感染中,通过未经消毒的奶瓶和乳头。联合国蛋白质咨询小组警告不要过早放弃母乳喂养,尤其是在贫困家庭,因为这对婴儿的健康和生存是毁灭性的。人工饲养的做法也有不利的经济影响。在牛奶的加工、包装、分销、准备和冷藏过程中产生的开支是巨大的,这是像印度这样的发展中国家无法承受的。母乳喂养还具有一定的避孕效果的优点。促进母乳喂养的概括包括:1)在生命最初6个月维持生长和良好营养所需的全部是未经补充的母乳;2)贫困妇女虽然营养状况不佳,但母乳的量和成分却出奇地好;有限的研究表明,提高母乳的数量和质量是可行的。概述了保健服务中应作出的修改。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Breast milk is the best.
Throughout the world, the concept that the best milk is breast milk is gaining momentum from ever increasing supportive scientific evidence. In India the average mother even with her poor nutritional status has the ability to breastfeed her infant for prolonged periods, sometimes extending to nearly 2 years. Human milk generally forms the only source of dietary protein for poor Indian infants, and the nutritional status of poor infants and children would be much worse than what it is today if not for breast milk. The positive economic and health implications of breast milk are obvious; it is the most hygienic, safest, and suitable nourishment a mother can provide for her infant. Recently, there has been an unfortunate trend toward artificial feeding among the average Indian mother. This practice is spreading among rural mothers and mothers of low socioeconomic groups. Due to poverty and ignorance many mothers neither can prepare the artificial milk feeding formula hygienically nor feed their children well, and the children are not only deprived of essential nutrients but are exposed to unnecessary intestinal infections introduced through unsterilized bottles and nipples. The Protein Advisory Group of the UN has warned against early abandonment of breastfeeding, particularly in poor families, as devastating to the health and survival of infants. The practice of artificial feeding also has adverse economic implications. The expenditure incurred in the processing, packing, distributing, preparing, and refrigerating cow's milk is enormous and one that a developing country like India cannot afford. Breast feeding also has the advantage of a certain amount of contraceptive effect. Generalizations for the promotion of breastfeeding include the following: 1) unsupplemented human milk is all that is needed to sustain growth and good nutrition for the first 6 months of life; 2) the volume and composition of human milk among poor women is surprisingly good despite their low nutrition status; and 3) limited studies have suggested that improvement in both the quantity and quality of breast milk is feasible. Modifications that should be made in health services are outlined.
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