1. Breast-feeding helps your uterus shrink after delivery.
Nursing causes your body to release a hormone called oxytocin. This
hormone helps your uterus return to its normal size after delivery.
2. Breast-feeding can help you lose weight.
Breast-feeding uses up calories and usually helps mothers lose some of
the extra weight they gained during pregnancy.
3. Breast-feeding is very convenient.
No matter where you are, the perfect food is ready for your baby. It
is at the right temperature and in the correct amount. You can take your baby with you
anywhere, knowing your milk will be ready for him whenever he is hungry.
4. Breast-feeding can work as birth control during the first 6 months
after delivery.
Breast-feeding works as a method of birth control during the first few
months after delivery. Breast-feeding provides protection against pregnancy during the
first 6 months after you give birth if:
you are feeding your baby nothing but breast milk AND
your menstrual periods have NOT returned.
Other methods of birth control should be used if:
you have started having menstrual periods again
you have added formula supplements or solid food to your baby's
diet OR
more than 6 months have passed since the birth.
There is a small risk that you will become pregnant while you are
breast-feeding. If you are worried about it, use another form of birth control as well.
5. Breast-feeding offers women some protection against disease.
Women who breast-feed are less likely to get breast cancer or ovarian
cancer and may be less likely to suffer broken hips in older life.
6. You can switch to bottle-feeding if you decide you want to stop
breast-feeding, but the opposite may not be true.
If you decide you do not want to nurse anymore, you can stop
breast-feeding and switch to bottle-feeding. On the other hand, after starting
bottle-feeding, you usually cannot switch to breast-feeding weeks later.