Breastfeeding in public gets an intelligent and healthy reaction

Luddly Neddite

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Sep 14, 2011
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So Johnson-Smith threw on a nursing cover and began discreetly breastfeeding her 12-month-old. “I usually don’t like to breastfeed in public because people can be judgmental,” she says. “The waitress kept walking by, and I was worried she didn’t want me nursing in the restaurant.” Eventually, worried that her baby would continue crying, Johnson-Smith left the restaurant and finished nursing in the car.

Shortly after, Johnson-Smith’s husband walked out with a huge smile on his face. “He handed me the dinner receipt and at first I was confused—why is he showing me how much my birthday dinner cost?” said Johnson-Smith. To her surprise, there was a handwritten note on the paper: ‘I bought one of your pizzas. Please thank your wife for breastfeeding!’

Good for this waitress. Nice to see that not everyone is a hater.
 
Granny wonderin' if Michelle breastfed Obama, would it make him smarter?...
:lol:
Breastfeeding Duration May Be Associated with Intelligence
July 30, 2013 > Add increased intelligence to the list of benefits associated with breastfeeding.
According to researchers, children who were breastfed longer had higher scores on intelligence or IQ tests. Using standardized tests, researchers at Boston Children’s Hospital in Massachusetts measured the IQ of some 1,300 children whose mothers were enrolled in a long-term study that looked for ways to improve maternal and child health.

Investigators tested the youngsters at age 3 to determine their ability to understand language. Lead researcher Mandy Brown Belfort says aptitude was an average of 2.5 percent higher among children who received nothing but breast milk for the first year, compared to infants who were given formula. “And then at age 7, we looked at verbal and non-verbal IQ and there the effect was a little bit stronger. So, for each additional month of breastfeeding, the IQ score was about a third of a point higher," said Belfort. Belfort, a neonatologist at Boston Children’s and professor of pediatrics at Harvard Medical School, says breastfeeding was not associated with higher scores on a test that measured memory and learning.

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World Breastfeeding Week, which occurs August 1-7, has a simple goal: to increase the number of mothers who breastfeed.

However, researchers found that visual motor skills, or the ability of the eyes to guide movements, were better among 3 year olds whose mothers consumed two or more servings of fish per week. At this point, Belfort says investigators can only speculate as to the reasons why breastfed children had higher IQs. “One is that there are either nutrients or other substances in breast milk that benefit the developing brain but haven’t been discovered yet, and so aren’t being added routinely to infant formula," she said.

Another possible explanation for the effect of breastfeeding duration on IQ, according to Belfort, is there is something about the interaction between mother and baby that boosts the child’s intelligence. A study on the link between the length of breastfeeding and IQ in children is published in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.

Breastfeeding Duration May Be Associated with Intelligence
 
The other server, perhaps the one who brought the garlic bread, must have been a young lad who got a tad too excited.

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