Nut allergies linked to breastfeeding

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Jul 13, 2012 at 12:10 PM

Breast feedingYour child’s  nut allergy may be due to breastfeeding.  A recent study has published that  children breastfed for the first six months of their birth are 1.5 times more likely to develop a nut allergy than those exposed to other foods and fluids. In the study parents were asked to report if the child had a nut allergy, and on feeding habits in the first six months of life.  The study found that rates of nut allergies in ACT children are increasing and children who were breast fed were more likely to have a nut allergy. “Some 3.9 percent of children starting school in the ACT have a parent-reported nut allergy, which is almost twice the rate of British children of the same age,” study author Marjan Kljakovic. The likelihood of developing a nut allergy was 1.5 times higher in children solely breast fed in the first six months of life than in those exposed to other foods and fluids.

“Our results contribute to the argument that breast feeding alone does not appear to be protective against nut allergy in children – it may, in fact, be causative of allergy,” Kljakovic said. “Peanut allergy accounts for two-thirds of all fatal food-induced allergic reactions. It is important for us to understand how feeding practices might be playing a part,” he added.

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