The VerdictHIGH CONVICTIONVerdict Score 82

Breastfeeding protects the mother's heart for decades, and there's a specific window where that protection peaks.

If you have more children planned, aim for 12-24 months of total breastfeeding across all of them. Two kids breastfed for 6-12 months each hits the sweet spot.

  1. The number that changed my mind: women who breastfeed 12-23 months total have a 7% lower risk of dying from any cause -- and the protection lasts 35+ years.
  2. The part that's backwards: the conversation focuses on the baby, but breastfeeding may matter just as much for the mother's long-term heart health.
  3. Start here: if you're planning more children, track your total breastfeeding months. The target is 12-24 months combined, not per child.

Think of pregnancy like taking out a metabolic loan -- your body borrows cholesterol and insulin resistance to build the baby. Breastfeeding is how you pay it back. The milk literally carries excess cholesterol and fat out of your bloodstream. Stop too early and you're still carrying the debt. Keep going past 24 months and the repayments don't shrink the balance any further -- the loan is already settled.

SH
Dr. Seth Holbrook, DPT — Doctor of Physical Therapy • Coach to 300+ clients
I built The Verdict to cut through recycled health advice and show what the evidence actually supports.

How Long Should You Breastfeed? The Evidence-Based Sweet Spot

Your baby isn't the only one breastfeeding protects -- and there's an exact window that matters most.

HIGH CONVICTION

If you have more children planned, aim for 12-24 months of total breastfeeding across all of them. Two kids breastfed for 6-12 months each hits the sweet spot.

The Nurses' Health Study tracked 166,708 women and found all-cause mortality was lowest at 12-23 months of total lifetime breastfeeding.

No equipment. No supplements. Just awareness of your total.

Breastfeeding protects the mother's heart for decades, and there's a specific window where that protection peaks.

Think of pregnancy like taking out a metabolic loan -- your body borrows cholesterol and insulin resistance to build the baby. Breastfeeding is how you pay it back. The milk literally carries excess cholesterol and fat out of your bloodstream. Stop too early and you're still carrying the debt. Keep going past 24 months and the repayments don't shrink the balance any further -- the loan is already settled.

  1. The number that changed my mind: women who breastfeed 12-23 months total have a 7% lower risk of dying from any cause -- and the protection lasts 35+ years.
  2. The part that's backwards: the conversation focuses entirely on the baby, but breastfeeding may matter just as much for the mother's long-term heart health.
  3. Start here: if you're planning more children, track your total breastfeeding months. The target is 12-24 months combined, not per child.

Want the full evidence? Keep scrolling

What Most People Think

Common beliefs about breastfeeding duration

The breastfeeding conversation almost always centres on the baby -- immune system benefits, bonding, cognitive development. When it comes to how long to breastfeed, the debate usually boils down to cultural comfort: "is it weird to breastfeed past 12 months?"

The mother's long-term health barely enters the picture. Most people assume the main benefit for mum is faster postpartum weight loss and some hormonal bonding. Beyond that, it's treated as a neutral act -- helpful for the baby, irrelevant for the mother's future.

What the Evidence Actually Shows

Research evidence on breastfeeding duration and health

Pregnancy deliberately makes you insulin resistant and raises your cholesterol to feed the growing baby. Breastfeeding reverses this -- it burns roughly 500 calories daily and physically excretes triglycerides and cholesterol through the milk. Women who skip breastfeeding or stop early stay in that elevated metabolic state for longer. HIGH

1.19 million women
Tschiderer et al. (2022) meta-analysis: any breastfeeding reduces CVD risk by 11%, coronary heart disease by 14%, and fatal CVD by 17%.

The dose-response isn't linear. The Nurses' Health Study tracked 166,708 women over 4.7 million person-years and found the mortality sweet spot sits between 12 and 23 months of total lifetime breastfeeding (HR 0.93). They modeled the data with cubic splines and found a clear non-linear U-shaped curve (p=0.0007). Beyond 24 months total, the risk reduction stops improving. HIGH

What would change this: an RCT with continuous glucose monitoring showing metabolic recovery completes within 6 months regardless of continued lactation.

For the baby, the protection is lifelong and causal. A Mendelian randomization study used genetic variants across 814,402 people to bypass socioeconomic confounding. Being breastfed as an infant reduced coronary atherosclerosis risk by 17.4%, with about 10% of that effect mediated by permanently higher HDL cholesterol (Zhang et al., 2025). MODERATE

What would change this: replication in non-European cohorts showing the genetic proxy doesn't hold across ancestries.

26% + 37%
Lower risk of breast cancer and ovarian cancer respectively in women who breastfeed 12+ months. Unlike cardiovascular markers, the cancer data doesn't show a clear plateau.

Cancer protection scales more aggressively with duration than cardiovascular protection. Women who breastfeed for 12+ months see a 26% lower risk of breast cancer and 37% lower risk of ovarian cancer. Unlike the heart data, the cancer evidence doesn't show a clear plateau at 24 months. HIGH

In the Women's Health Initiative, an average of 35 years had passed since participants had lactated. Those with 7-12 months of lifetime lactation still showed a 28% reduction in cardiovascular disease (HR 0.72). The metabolic reset isn't temporary -- it prints for decades (Schwarz et al., 2009). HIGH

The Debate

Does breastfeeding protect against metabolic syndrome?

SWAN, NHANES III (Western cohorts)
12-23 months of lactation decreases elevated blood pressure by 32% and glucose by 22%. Progressive dose-response gradient.
VS
KNHANES (10,356 Korean postmenopausal women)
The breastfeeding group had a HIGHER prevalence of metabolic syndrome (OR 1.4).
The Korean breastfeeding group had significantly lower household income and education levels. Socioeconomic deprivation -- poorer diet, less exercise, more chronic stress -- overwhelmed the biological protection. Western cohorts control for these variables more consistently.

Honest Limitations

The Biological Catch-22

Lab: metabolic ward studies show breastfeeding reverses pregnancy-induced insulin resistance and dyslipidemia.
Real world: higher pre-pregnancy BMI reduces odds of sustaining breastfeeding by 17% per 5 kg/m2 increase. Women with gestational diabetes face delayed milk production and higher C-section rates.
MORE CONSERVATIVE

The Stress Cancellation

Lab: controlled trials (MySweetheart RCT) show cardiovascular benefits with dedicated interdisciplinary support.
Real world: chronic cortisol from pumping in hostile work environments can dysregulate glucose metabolism enough to negate the insulin-sensitising benefits.
MORE CONSERVATIVE

The Age Ceiling

Lab: large cohorts show robust CVD protection persisting decades after lactation.
Real world: the protective effect diminishes or becomes statistically insignificant in women aged 65+. Arterial stiffness and estrogen depletion dominate.
MORE CONSERVATIVE

The Practical Takeaway

Practical steps for optimal breastfeeding duration

If you can breastfeed at all, aim for at least 6 months. This is where the most dramatic metabolic normalization happens. The MySweetheart RCT showed that women who breastfed 6+ months had lower visceral fat, lower inflammation, and better insulin sensitivity at 1 year postpartum.

The strongest long-term protection comes from 12-24 months total across all children. This doesn't mean 12-24 months per child -- it's cumulative lifetime total. Two children breastfed for 6-12 months each hits the optimal window.

Don't push past 24 months total for health reasons alone. The cardiovascular data shows diminishing returns, and some markers actually plateau. If you want to continue for bonding or other reasons, that's fine -- but the health argument weakens past this point.

The Nuance

Nuances of breastfeeding duration research

The cruel biological catch-22. The women who need the metabolic reset most are the ones who struggle to breastfeed. Higher pre-pregnancy BMI reduces odds of sustaining breastfeeding by 17% per 5 kg/m2 increase (Mendelian randomization data). Women with gestational diabetes face delayed milk production and higher C-section rates. The system fails the people it could help the most.

Environment matters more than duration. The insulin-sensitising effects of lactation assume a low-stress environment. Chronic cortisol from pumping in hostile work environments can dysregulate glucose metabolism enough to negate the cardiovascular protection entirely. The controlled trials that show these benefits occurred in systems with dedicated interdisciplinary support -- not the unassisted reality most working mothers face.

Midlife protection, not lifetime immunity. The cardiovascular benefits are robust in women under 65 but diminish or lose statistical significance in older women. Lactation resets midlife metabolism -- it doesn't permanently override the primary drivers of arterial ageing like arterial stiffness and estrogen depletion.

Conviction

Research conviction assessment
HIGH CONVICTION

The maternal cardiovascular and mortality benefits up to the 24-month threshold are supported by massive statistical power (N > 1.19 million across meta-analyses), consistent dose-response gradients across multiple independent cohorts, biologically plausible mechanisms (lipid excretion, metabolic reset), and Mendelian randomization confirming causal infant effects.

Conviction for extreme prolonged breastfeeding (>24 months) yielding continuous additive health benefits is LOW -- large-scale data shows a plateau or rebound.

What would change the maternal cardiovascular claim

An RCT (N > 5,000) with continuous glucose monitoring and metabolomics at 3, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months postpartum showing that metabolic recovery completes within 6 months regardless of continued lactation. This would prove the 12-24 month observational benefit is healthy user bias, not ongoing biological reset.

What would change the infant atherosclerosis claim

Replication of the Zhang et al. (2025) Mendelian randomization in non-European ancestry cohorts showing the genetic proxy for breastfeeding status doesn't hold. The current study is limited to European GWAS data with potential recall bias in the original questionnaire for infant breastfeeding status.

Sources

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Verdict Score

How strong is the evidence for the claims in this review? Higher = more confidence the claims are supported. This does not measure how large the effect is or how important it is compared with other levers.

82 Strong evidence
80–100Strong evidence ◀
60–79Mixed but supportive
40–59Uncertain
0–39Weak support

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