My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Get advice and support with infant feeding from other users here.

Infant feeding

What % of children are bf until their 2nd birthday?

55 replies

Winterclause · 14/01/2014 18:41

Does anyone know?!

We were having a discussion today and I thought about 10% but my friend thought it was about 1%!

We did google but couldn't find anything specific to the uk!

OP posts:
Report
shoom · 14/01/2014 18:45

I'd be surprised if it's as high as 1%, I thought that was the number of babies exclusively bf to 6 months.

Report
handcream · 14/01/2014 18:46

I would be staggered if it is 10% - at 2 years old!

Report
stargirl1701 · 14/01/2014 18:48

In the UK? I would estimate 0.01%

Report
clarinsgirl · 14/01/2014 18:48

Don't know exactly but it will be significantly less than 1%. As Shoom says, think about 1% bf until 6 mnths.

Report
Winterclause · 14/01/2014 18:53

No I think the 1% at 6 months is ebf. So if your baby has had any sort of solid food before then they are then not classes as ebf! I think at least 25-30% of babies are still getting breastmilk at 6 months?

We did blw from about 22 weeks so although my baby never had any other milk but bm by 6 months she wouldn't have been in that 1%!

OP posts:
Report
atthestrokeoftwelve · 14/01/2014 18:57

Good question and difficult to find a definitive answer. Globally it seems to be around 50% of human babies are still being breastfed at 2 years- many for a lot longer.

Report
lilyaldrin · 14/01/2014 19:09

Thinking of the 10 small children I know of from my immediate social/family circle:
All were breastfed to some extent
I think only one, if any, was ebf at 6 months
9 were breastfed at 3 months
5 were breastfed at 6 months
4 were breastfed at 12 months
2 were breastfed at 18 months
1 was breastfed at 2 years

I don't know how representative that sample is though!

Agree with you OP that "EBF" isn't a very good indication of how much breastfeeding is actually going on (probably even less so globally) as almost everyone I know, even the most enthusiastic breastfeeders, gave their baby some other kind of milk or food before 6 months.

Report
Winterclause · 14/01/2014 19:10

Attyestroke- yes we found 50-75% in some countries but we were debating about the uk!

It's just curiosity really! Out of our group of 10 , 4 of us are still bf at 18m +. We just couldn't find any uk numbers for anything over 12 months..

OP posts:
Report
KingRollo · 14/01/2014 19:11

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

KingRollo · 14/01/2014 19:26

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

atthestrokeoftwelve · 14/01/2014 19:31

Data is not collected for children being breastfed over 12 months- not through the UNICEF & Office for National Statistics.
The data collection programme stops at 12 months.

Report
addictedtosugar · 14/01/2014 19:34

Unicef feeding survey stops at 8-10 months, so I'm not even sure if the stats are collected. But since 12% are feeding at 4 months, presumably that removes the weaning not counting as ebf.

King what about the WHO recommendation of feeding for 2 years?

Report
addictedtosugar · 14/01/2014 19:35

Everyone has typed faster than me!

Report
KingRollo · 14/01/2014 19:40

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

canthaveit · 14/01/2014 19:51

I would imagine very few. Dd fed until 15 months, which was the longest of anyone I knew. Ds currently still feeding at almost 15 months, no sign of home wanting to stop but I can't quote see it carrying on until 2 (not least because one nipple keeps getting very sore!)

I think the recommendations to breastfeed exclusively until 6 months have led to a lot of confusion, with most people seeming to aim to breastfeed until 6 months (not realising it isn't referred to as exclusive beyond that due to solids)

Report
StealthPolarBear · 14/01/2014 19:55

The department of health used to collect breastfeeding stats, its now nhs england. Two point are collected - initiation and 6-8 weeks. In england thats all there is but that will hopefully improve.

Report
HoratiaDrelincourt · 14/01/2014 20:53

I'm almost the only person I know IRL who's bf past two years (and I've done so twice) and I have a lot of relatively militant bf type friends. The only other is a BFC and trainee HV.

What questions come up in the Infant Feeding Survey? I can't remember if they even asked.

Report
StealthPolarBear · 14/01/2014 20:54

IIRC the categories go up to "1 year +"

Report
HoratiaDrelincourt · 14/01/2014 20:56

Seen other posts now.

A 52w maternity leave supports 6m ebf but does interfere with extended breastfeeding. A lot of nursing strikes in the second year are misinterpreted as self-weaning by exhausted mothers dragged in eight directions at once, who are secretly glad to be putting away the clicky bras for a bit.

Report
Fantail · 14/01/2014 21:00

What does the "at birth" refer to? Does it mean that you offer the breast or that actually the sole sustenance is from breastmilk for the first few days.

Thinking about my NCT group of 9, I think it would have been something along the lines of:

9 "at birth"
7 at 6 weeks
6 at 3 months (although 2 were offering breast and formula)
4 at 6 months
3 at 12 months
1 at 18 months
0 at 24 months

Report
Fantail · 14/01/2014 21:03

At 14 months my DD was down to one feed a day (at night) and had completely dropped that by 15 months. I had actually wanted to keep it up over the winter until she was 18 months, but yes I was relieved to stop. I don't feel bad about it.

Report
HoratiaDrelincourt · 14/01/2014 21:04

I think "at birth" means "first feed". It was certainly recorded in my delivery notes.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

FrequentFlyerRandomDent · 14/01/2014 21:06

How do they know though?

I have BF-ed DC2 and DC3 beyond age 2. But I will not be in any stats because no one (GP, HV) has asked me.

Report
Alibabaandthe40nappies · 14/01/2014 21:08

100% in this house Smile

Report
atthestrokeoftwelve · 14/01/2014 21:08

At birth mean initiation of breastfeeding, ie even one feed.

I have seen hundreds of women feeding two, three four and five year olds, but I am a retired LLL counsellor so definitely not a representative sample- as most of that was within toddler breastfeeding support groups!

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.