Israeli Study: Breastfeeding Can Reduce Risk of Children Getting Cancer
Error: Contact form not found.
by JNS.org
JNS.org – Breastfeeding can significantly reduce the risk of children getting cancer, says a new study conducted by Israel’s University of Haifa.
According to the study, children who were breastfed decreased the chances of developing cancer by 60 percent.
“We asked the mothers in the study about breastfeeding, nutrition, exposure to pets, exposure to detergents, etc.,” said Dr. Keinan-Boker, a professor in the University of Haifa’s School of Public Health and deputy director of the Israeli Health Ministry’s Center for Disease Control.
Additionally, the study compared children who were exclusively breastfed up until four months old with children who stopped being breastfed before that age, and found that those who were exclusively breastfed had decreased the chances of getting cancer by 40 percent.
The study, which was funded by the Israel Cancer Association, interviewed 190 whose children developed leukemia or lymphoma before the age of 19 as well as 348 mothers from healthy children.
Irish Band Kneecap Sues Canadian Indigenous Leader for Defamation After Accused of Hamas Support
77 Percent of American Jews Experienced Antisemitism After October 7, New Poll Shows
Brad Lander Endorses Anti-Israel Progressive Candidate Who Hesitated to Condemn Synagogue Terror Attack
The Dream of Chachmei Lublin
Why Is Moses Not Called Mosheh? A Journey Through Biblical History and Translation
The MOU with Iran Is ‘Over’ — Are We Returning to War?
A Room That Stayed Standing
Almost Half of American Muslims Hold “Favorable” View Towards Hamas, Poll Finds
Israel’s Hapoel Tel Aviv Signs NBA Veteran Amir Coffey on One-Year Deal
Silicon Valley’s Language Models Don’t Debunk Persian Language Antisemitism, Report Says










