Breastfeeding and Breast Cancer Risk Reduction: Implications for Black Mothers

American Journal of Preventive Medicine, 53(3S1), S40-S46

DOI 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.04.024 PMID 28818244

Abstract

Breast cancer is the most commonly diagnosed cancer and a leading cause of death from cancer among U.S. women. Studies have suggested that breastfeeding reduces breast cancer risk among parous women, and there is mounting evidence that this association may differ by subtype such that breastfeeding may be more protective of some invasive breast cancer types. The purpose of this review is to discuss breast cancer disparities in the context of breastfeeding and the implications for black mothers. Black women in the U.S. have lower rates of breastfeeding and nearly twice the rates of triple-negative breast cancer (an aggressive subtype) compared with white women. In addition to individual challenges to breastfeeding, black women may also differentially face contextual barriers such as a lack of social and cultural acceptance in their communities, inadequate support from the healthcare community, and unsupportive work environments. More work is needed to improve the social factors and policies that influence breastfeeding rates at a population level. Such efforts should give special consideration to the needs of black mothers to adequately address disparities in breastfeeding among this group and possibly help reduce breast cancer risk. Interventions such as peer counseling, hospital policy changes, breastfeeding-specific clinic appointments, group prenatal education, and enhanced breastfeeding programs have been shown to be effective in communities of color. A comprehensive approach that integrates interventions across multiple levels and settings may be most successful in helping mothers reach their breastfeeding goals and reducing disparities in breastfeeding and potentially breast cancer incidence.

Topics

Anstey Shoemaker Barrera breastfeeding breast cancer risk reduction Black mothers, breastfeeding duration breast cancer protective effect African American women disparity, lactation breast cancer risk inverse association estrogen receptor-negative tumors, Black mothers lower breastfeeding initiation rate breast cancer health disparity, American Journal Preventive Medicine 2017 breastfeeding breast cancer Black women, triple-negative breast cancer breastfeeding protection African American women evidence, breastfeeding promotion public health intervention breast cancer prevention Black women, racial disparity breastfeeding rates breast cancer incidence mortality Black mothers, lactation hormone modulation breast tissue differentiation cancer protection mechanism, breastfeeding support WIC peer counseling Black mothers breast cancer reduction
PMID 28818244 28818244 DOI 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.04.024 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.04.024

Cite this article

Anstey, E., Shoemaker, M., Barrera, C., Barrera, C., Verma, A. B., & Holman, D. (2017). Breastfeeding and Breast Cancer Risk Reduction: Implications for Black Mothers. *American journal of preventive medicine*, *53*(3S1), S40-S46. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.amepre.2017.04.024