Protective Effect of Breastfeeding against Overweight Can Be Detected
as Early as the Second Year of Life: A Study of Children from One of
the Most Socially-deprived Areas of Brazil
Millions of children live in Brazil\u2019s semi-arid region, one of
the most socially-deprived areas of the country, where undernutrition
co-exists with obesity as a consequence of the nutrition transition.
There is evidence that childhood obesity predisposes adult obesity and,
thus, that obesity should be prevented as early as possible. Some
studies have shown that breastfeeding is a protective factor against
overweight and obesity while other studies have not found this
association. There have been few studies on this association in
developing countries and of children below two years of age. The
present study aimed to investigate whether children exposed to
exclusive breastfeeding for 656 months showed a lower prevalence
of overweight in the second year of life, based on a probability sample
of 2,209 children (aged 12 to 24 months). The dependent variable was
overweight, defined as weight-for-length z-scores of >2, based on
the WHO 2006 standard while the independent variable was exclusive
breastfeeding ( 656 months). The prevalence ratio (PR) and its 95%
CI were estimated using Poisson regression with robust adjustment of
variance. After adjusting for potential confounding factors
(socioeconomic, demographic and health-related variables), children on
exclusive breastfeeding for 656 months showed a lower prevalence
of overweight (5.7% vs 9.1%, PR 0.62, 95% CI 0.45-0.89). It was found
that exclusive breastfeeding for six months or more is a protective
factor against overweight in children in the second year of life living
in the Brazilian semi-arid region