Department of Medicine, Cambridge Health Alliance and Harvard Medical School, Cambridge, Massachusetts; the Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Division of Maternal-Fetal Medicine, University of North Carolina School of Medicine, and the Department of Statistics and Operations Research, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; the Departments of Medicine, Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences, and Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; the Alliance for the Prudent Use of Antibiotics, Boston, Massachusetts; and the Department of Health Care Organization and Policy, School of Public Health, University of Alabama, Birmingham, Alabama.
Obstet Gynecol. 2013 Jul;122(1):111-119. doi: 10.1097/AOG.0b013e318297a047.
To estimate the U.S. maternal health burden from current breastfeeding rates both in terms of premature death as well as economic costs.
Using literature on associations between lactation and maternal health, we modeled the health outcomes and costs expected for a U.S. cohort of 15-year-old females followed to age 70 years. In 2002, this cohort included 1.88 million individuals. Using Monte Carlo simulations, we compared the outcomes expected if 90% of mothers were able to breastfeed for at least 1 year after each birth with outcomes under the current 1-year breastfeeding rate of 23%. We modeled cases of breast cancer, premenopausal ovarian cancer, hypertension, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and myocardial infarction considering direct costs, indirect costs, and cost of premature death (before age 70 years) expressed in 2011 dollars.
If observed associations between breastfeeding duration and maternal health are causal, we estimate that current breastfeeding rates result in 4,981 excess cases of breast cancer, 53,847 cases of hypertension, and 13,946 cases of myocardial infarction compared with a cohort of 1.88 million U.S. women who optimally breastfed. Using a 3% discount rate, suboptimal breastfeeding incurs a total of $17.4 billion in cost to society resulting from premature death (95% confidence interval [CI] $4.38-24.68 billion), $733.7 million in direct costs (95% CI $612.9-859.7 million), and $126.1 million indirect morbidity costs (95% CI $99.00-153.22 million). We found a nonsignificant difference in number of deaths before age 70 years under current breastfeeding rates (4,396 additional premature deaths, 95% CI -810-7,918).
Suboptimal breastfeeding may increase U.S. maternal morbidity and health care costs. Thus, investigating whether the observed associations between suboptimal breastfeeding and adverse maternal health outcomes are causal should be a research priority.
从早产死亡和经济成本两方面评估美国当前母乳喂养率造成的母婴健康负担。
利用有关哺乳与母婴健康关联的文献,我们对 15 岁女性的美国队列进行建模,这些女性一直随访至 70 岁。2002 年,该队列包括 188 万人。通过蒙特卡罗模拟,我们比较了如果 90%的母亲每次分娩后至少能母乳喂养 1 年的情况下预期的结果与当前 23%的 1 年母乳喂养率下的结果。我们考虑了乳腺癌、绝经前卵巢癌、高血压、2 型糖尿病和心肌梗死的直接成本、间接成本和(70 岁前)过早死亡的成本(以 2011 年美元计算)。
如果观察到的母乳喂养持续时间与母婴健康之间的关联是因果关系,我们估计,与 188 万美国女性最佳母乳喂养队列相比,当前母乳喂养率导致 4981 例乳腺癌、53847 例高血压和 13946 例心肌梗死病例增加。使用 3%的贴现率,次优母乳喂养导致过早死亡造成的社会总成本为 174 亿美元(95%置信区间为 43.8-246.8 亿美元),直接成本为 7.337 亿美元(95%置信区间为 6.129-8.597 亿美元),间接发病率成本为 1.261 亿美元(95%置信区间为 99.00-1.532 亿美元)。我们发现,当前母乳喂养率下 70 岁前死亡人数没有显著差异(额外 4396 例过早死亡,95%置信区间为-810-7918)。
次优母乳喂养可能会增加美国母婴发病率和医疗保健成本。因此,调查观察到的次优母乳喂养与不良母婴健康结果之间的关联是否具有因果关系,应该是一个研究重点。