Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Those Who Breastfeed Have Better Chance To Survive Breast Cancer

Darpan News Desk IANS, 01 Sep, 2016 11:27 AM
    Women who breastfeed for more than six months have higher chances of surviving breast cancer, a new study has found.
     
    According to the study, published in the journal Breastfeeding Medicine, breastfeeding for longer than six months is also associated with a better survival rate.
     
    In the study, the researchers examined the link between lifetime breastfeeding history and both breast cancer-specific and overall survival among women.
     
    They found that both breast cancer mortality and overall mortality risk were less after 20 years among women.
     
    "This study confirms that the long-term maternal health benefits of breastfeeding are not only preventative in nature, but that it also has the capacity to reduce the severity of breast cancer," said Arthur I. Eidelman, Editor-in-Chief of the journal Breastfeeding Medicine.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Pistachios Also Sold In Canada Blamed For At Least 11 Illnesses In US

    At least 11 people in nine U.S. states have been infected in a salmonella outbreak linked to pistachios and two of them have been hospitalized.

    Pistachios Also Sold In Canada Blamed For At Least 11 Illnesses In US

    Tampon Tax: Does Being Female In The US Carry Unfair Costs?

    Tampon Tax: Does Being Female In The US Carry Unfair Costs?
    Margo Seibert and Natalie Brasington don't think women should have to pay a "period tax," and like a growing number of other women, they are publicly questioning whether being female in the U.S. carries unfair costs.

    Tampon Tax: Does Being Female In The US Carry Unfair Costs?

    To Fluoridate Or Not To Fluoridate? Municipalities Drinking Up Water Debate

    To Fluoridate Or Not To Fluoridate? Municipalities Drinking Up Water Debate
    Dentist Larry Levin has made his pitch about the importance of adding fluoride to drinking water several times in recent years to city councils voting on the controversial issue.

    To Fluoridate Or Not To Fluoridate? Municipalities Drinking Up Water Debate

    New Ways Of Fighting Zika Needed After Dengue Problems

    New Ways Of Fighting Zika Needed After Dengue Problems
    Everything that was done in the country to control (mosquitoes) apparently didn't work," said Jorge Kalil, director of the Butantan Institute in Sao Paolo, Brazil, who attended the meeting

    New Ways Of Fighting Zika Needed After Dengue Problems

    Did You Know Your Height And Weight May Affect Income?

    Men who are shorter in height and women who are obese are more likely to be socio-economically deprived with lower levels of education, occupation, and income, suggests new research.

    Did You Know Your Height And Weight May Affect Income?

    Strong Sexual Desires Common Among Women Too

    Strong Sexual Desires Common Among Women Too
    The findings showed that a number of legal sexual interests and behaviours considered anomalous are actually common in the general population. 

    Strong Sexual Desires Common Among Women Too