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American Academy of Pediatrics
Article

Artificial Feeding and Hospitalization in the First 18 Months of Life

Yue Chen, Shunzhang Yu and Wan-xian Li
Pediatrics January 1988, 81 (1) 58-62;
Yue Chen
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Shunzhang Yu
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Wan-xian Li
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Abstract

The association between type of feeding and hospitalization during the first 18 months of life was examined among 1,058 infants from Jing-An district, Shanghai, People's Republic of China. Infants who had never been fed with mother's milk were categorized as artificially fed; the remainder were breast-fed. The rate of hospitalization for first episodes of respiratory infections during the first 18 months of life for the artificially fed infants was 18.0% v 11.2% for the breast-fed infants (P < .01). Multiple logistic regression analysis demonstrated that the adverse effect of artificial feeding on the hospitalization rate for respiratory infections was independent of birth weight, father's education, passive smoking, and any case(s) of chronic respiratory disease in the family. The adjusted odds ratio for the artificially fed infants compared with the breast-fed infants was 2.11. The artificially fed infants were also hospitalized more frequently for gastroenteritis and other conditions, but the differences were not significant.

  • infant feeding
  • hospitalization rate
  • respiratory infection
  • Received March 10, 1986.
  • Accepted February 19, 1987.
  • Copyright © 1988 by the American Academy of Pediatrics
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Pediatrics
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1 Jan 1988
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Artificial Feeding and Hospitalization in the First 18 Months of Life
Yue Chen, Shunzhang Yu, Wan-xian Li
Pediatrics Jan 1988, 81 (1) 58-62;

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Artificial Feeding and Hospitalization in the First 18 Months of Life
Yue Chen, Shunzhang Yu, Wan-xian Li
Pediatrics Jan 1988, 81 (1) 58-62;
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