Should I Breastfeed My Baby?
1. GET THE FACTS
Your options
- Breastfeed
- Mixed-feed (Breastfeed & sometimes bottle-feed with breast milk or formula)
- Bottle-feed with formula
Key points to remember
- Breastfeeding is a personal choice. How you feed your baby is your decision. Your thoughts and feelings about it are an important part of the decision.
- The American Academy of Pediatrics and most doctors advise breastfeeding for 1 year or longer.
- Breast milk is the perfect food for your baby. It has almost all the nutrients a baby needs for the first 6 months of life.
- Babies can also get good nutrition from bottle-feeding with formula.
- Breast milk helps prevent many illnesses.
- Breastfeeding helps a woman’s body recover from the stresses of pregnancy, labor, and delivery.
- Breastfeeding may lower your risks of breast cancer and diabetes later in life.
How do you feel about breastfeeding?
Only you know your own thoughts and feelings about breastfeeding. This is an important part of making this decision.
- Do you want to breastfeed? With right teaching and support, you can! Before your baby is born, plan ahead and learn all you can about breastfeeding. This helps make it easier.
- Do you know someone who can teach you about breastfeeding? Breastfeeding is a natural process, but it takes time and practice for you and your baby to do it well. Doctors, nurses, breastfeeding consultants, friends, family, and support groups can help.
- Are you comfortable with breastfeeding? If you are modest or have concerns about breastfeeding, doctors, nurses, & consultants can show you how to breastfeed in public without showing your breast.
- Is anyone else trying to convince you one way or the other? Do what is right for you and your baby. Don’t let others make this decision for you.
- How does your work or school situation affect your decision? Many women are able to provide breast milk even when they are away from their babies. You can get a breast pump and learn to pump your breasts.
- Is the cost of formula a concern? Formula is expensive. Breastfeeding is free.
- Are you concerned about your body/breasts changes? In general, breasts return to their pre-pregnancy size when the body returns to its pre-pregnancy weight. Pregnancy, more than breastfeeding, causes most breast changes.
What health problems could affect your decision?
- If you have active tuberculosis
- If you are HIV positive
- If you take street drugs and/or drink a lot of alcohol
- If you are being treated with chemotherapy
2. COMPARE YOUR OPTIONS
| Breastfeeding | Formula |
What are the benefits?
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What are the benefits?
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What is usually involved?
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What is usually involved?
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What are the risks and side effects?
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What are the risks and side effects?
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3. MAKING YOUR DECISION
Your personal feelings are just as important as the medical facts. Think about what matters most to you & your baby in this decision.
| Start your help guide to make your decision |
References
Citations
- Talayero JMP, et al. (2006). Full breastfeeding and hospitalization as a result of infections in the first year of life. Pediatrics, 118(1): 92–99.
- Victoria CG, et al. (2016). Breastfeeding in the 21st century: Epidemiology, mechanisms, and lifelong effect. Lancet, 387(10017): 475–490. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(15)01024-7. Accessed January 16, 2018.





