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Video on Pacifiers For Breastfed Babies

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Pacifiers For Breastfed Babies
Christine Albury
Iron plays an important role in the development of a baby's brain and a lack of iron can significantly affect a baby's ability to learn in later life. Iron is also required by the body to make hemoglobin, which supplies oxygen -- through the blood -- to the cells of the body. In addition, iron gives red blood cells their color, which is why a lack of iron is often suspected when someone appears particularly pale.
Babies are born with stores of iron, obtained from their mothers during pregnancy. For full term babies, these stores will usually last for at least the first 6 months of life. Some babies, however, are born with inadequate iron stores and have an increased risk of developing iron-deficiency anemia. These include
  • Low birthweight babies (generally below 6.5lb). This applies whether or not the pregnancy was full term.
  • At some point, these babies may require iron supplementation, on medical advice.
    However, it is the ROUTINE supplementation of full term, healthy, breastfed infants at 6 months that many experts are calling into question.
    Whilst you may hear that the iron levels in breastmilk are low, a fact very often overlooked is that iron from breastmilk is extremely well absorbed, at a rate of 49 percent of the available iron. This is because breastmilk contains lactoferrin and transferrin, two specialized proteins that ensure efficient delivery of iron from the milk to your baby. These proteins also prevent the growth of "unfriendly" bacteria, such as E. Coli, by ensuring that no iron is made available to them.
    In addition, breastmilk contains high levels of vitamin C and lactose, both of which assist with efficient iron absorption.
    For these reasons, many experts now feel that an exclusively breast fed baby receives sufficient iron to keep his levels within the normal range BEYOND the first six months of life. It is, of course, a sensible precaution to have your baby's iron levels tested, to ensure that no deficiency is present.
    Once iron supplements, solid foods or mixed feeding (ie breastmilk plus iron-fortified formula) are introduced to a baby, the amount of iron available to him from breastmilk actually reduces. This is because the specialized breast milk proteins can become saturated by the extra iron he is receiving. They then become less efficient in their job of delivering iron to the baby.
    Therefore, it is very important to make sure that, when your baby is eating solid foods on a regular basis, his diet contains plenty of iron rich foods.
    These will compensate for the reduction in the amount of iron he is receiving from breastmilk. Good sources of iron include
    meat
    peas
    dark green vegetables
    beans
    tofu
    avocado
    yam
    barley
    whole wheat cereal
    broccoli
    blackstrap molasses
    amaranth
    quinoa
    millet
    It is useful to serve foods containing vitamin C along with iron rich foods, as this combination aids iron absorption. Cooking in cast iron pans is also helpful, as the acids in some foods will "pull" the iron from the pan.
    It is important to remember that a nursing mother cannot increase the iron levels in her breastmilk by increasing her own iron intake.
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