Pumped Milk Gives Infants Different Bacteria Than Breastfeeding Study Says

Pumped Milk Gives Infants Different Bacteria Than Breastfeeding, Study Says

18:04 EST 15 Feb 2019 | Discover Magazine

Mother’s milk provides sustenance for babies. Now researchers find pumped breast milk exposes newborns to more disease-causing bacteria than milk directly from the breast. The discovery suggests breastfeeding practices could shift the makeup of microorganisms in breast milk and infants’ digestive systems. “We were surprised that the method of feeding was the most consistent factor associated with milk microbiota composition,” said Meghan Azad, a medical geneticist at the Children’s Hospit

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