Only to men, or women over 16.
Breast milk is a secretion and you do not get the infection through the breast milk. Though this can happen rarely. As anything is possible in biology.
Yes, small amounts of gluten can pass through breast milk to infants when consumed by breastfeeding mothers.
Bovine tuberculosis is the most notorious disease spread through unpasteurized milk.
HIV can be transmitted through breast milk when a mother who is infected with the virus breastfeeds her baby. The virus can pass from the mother's milk to the baby's bloodstream, increasing the risk of the baby becoming infected with HIV.
Mothers pass on immunity to diseases through their breast milk. So it is best if a mother can breast feed.
pepto bismol
Some decongestants pass into breast milk and may have unwanted effects on nursing babies whose mothers take the drugs.
It takes about two to six hours for your body to digest and absorb the food you eat and pass it into your breast milk.
Axillary nodes
STDs (Sexually Transmitted Diseases) by nature require sexual contact to be transmitted. Someone may get herpes or syphilis from someone sucking their breasts, and then may pass it along to someone else. Breast milk may include HIV, although an adult drinking infected breast milk may be at lower risk than an infant. Overall, the person with the breast is more likely to get an STD from this activity than the person whose mouth is on the breast.Absolutely not!
bring a pacemaker keep it near your breast then through the hole of your breast pass the wire..................................
Whatever it is you're puffing, if you're puffing enough of it to get into your own bloodstream and it CAN enter breast milk, then it WILL do so.There may not be MUCH, but there will certainly be more than if you hadn't "puffed" at all.