Dr. Robert Wood

Food Allergies For Dummies


Food Allergies Home


Articles

  • Peanut Allergy Cure?
  • Food Allergies: Nothing to Joke About
  • Probiotics in the Prevention and Treatment of Food Allergies
  • Household Cleaners Clarification
  • Food Allergens in Non-Food Items
  • Taking Food Allergies Back to School
  • Assessing the Risks of Allergens in Schools
  • 504 Plan for Food Allergies
  • Debunking Alternative Food Allergy Tests and Therapies
  • Testing for Food Allergies
  • My Food Allergy Reactions
  • Assessing the Real Risk of Airborne Peanut
  • Busting Common Food Allergy Myths
  • Beware of False Positives
  • Will I Ever Outgrow My Food Allergy?
  • Have You Outgrown Your Food Allergy?
  • The Risks of Eating Out
  • Food Allergy Epidemic?
  • Food Allergy Blamed for Death at Dinner
  • Does Breastfeeding Prevent Food Allergies?
  • Choosing a Food Allergy-Friendly Camp
  • Check Your Epinephrine Autoinjectors
  • Diagnosing and Treating Celiac Disease

Does Breastfeeding Prevent Food Allergies?

A study was recently published in the journal Clinical and Experimental Allergy entitled "The association between infant feeding practices and subsequent atopy among children with a family history of asthma." This study, performed by researchers in Sydney, Australia evaluated the effectiveness of breastfeeding and delaying the introduction of solid foods on preventing asthma and allergies, including food allergies.

While I have no criticism to offer for the study itself, The Australian picked up on it and published a story carrying the headline "Breastfeeding worsens asthma, allergies in children." I am afraid that someone reading the headline and the article accompanying it might conclude that breastfeeding is actually a bad idea.

I reviewed the study, and found it to be not nearly as alarming as the newspaper article made it sound. The following items summarize the results from the study:

  • "In 516 children evaluated at age 5 years, there was no significant association between the duration of breastfeeding or timing of introduction of solid foods and protection against asthma or other allergic disease."
  • "Breastfeeding for 6 months or more and introduction of solid foods after 3 months were both associated with an increased risk of atopy at age 5 years." ("Atopy" simply means allergies or asthma.)
  • "There was no significant association between the presence of eczema at 4 weeks and at 3 months and continued breastfeeding beyond those times."

The study concluded "Longer duration of breastfeeding and later introduction of solid foods did not prevent the onset of asthma, eczema or atopy by age 5 years."

I feel that there are two important points to be made. First, studies in this area have produced conflicting results, with some showing that breast feeding offers modest protection, some showing no effect, and others showing increased rates of allergy. Second, breastfeeding has far too many health benefits to recommend against doing it, even if it might slightly increase the chance of future allergy. Until we have more conclusive evidence, the recommendation is to continue breastfeeding. Breastfeeding is still far safer than cow's milk.

© Copyright 2009 Dr. Robert A. Wood, MD & Joe Kraynak, All Rights Reserved