Less Financial Cost
A mother can breastfeed her child anytime and anywhere she needs to, meaning no more last-minute runs to the grocery store for formula-based goods because breastmilk is always available, whether at home or otherwise. Some accessories, such as a breast pump, nursing bras, lactation boosters, and pillows, are just a few things needed to nurse an infant effectively. It is cost-efficient and the most convenient way to feed an infant.
There is no need to buy breast milk. Unless a mother is pumping her breastmilk for her baby’s consumption, there’s no need for costly supplies like nipples, bottles, and pumps. What makes breastfeeding low-cost is a mother’s food consumption that is naturally processed in the system to make food for the infant. This idea of an almost-free food source is very pleasing.
Breastfed infants have lesser possibility of getting sick; this may indirectly imply that they make fewer trips to the pediatrician’s office, and less money is paid for prescriptions and over-the-counter medicines.
More practically, breastfeeding advocates one point over and over: Breastfeeding naturally costs much less than formula-based feeding.