Hospitals
must support breastfeeding which saves lives - WHO,
UNICEF
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[April 12, 2018] By
Stephanie Nebehay
GENEVA (Reuters) - Babies, even those who
are premature, underweight or sickly, should be exclusively breastfed,
from the maternity ward and ideally for two years, the U.N. agencies
said on Wednesday.
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Hospitals and health facilities must support mothers in
breastfeeding right after delivery and not promote use of infant
formula unless there is a medical reason, the World Health
Organization (WHO) and U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF) said.
"This initiative is really about the first few days of life, it's
about what happens in our birthing facilities. ..It is a critical
juncture to make sure that breastfeeding gets started appropriately
and that mothers can be successful," Dr. Laurence Grummer-Strawn, a
WHO expert, told a news briefing.
Breastfeeding within one hour of birth reduces the chances of an
infant acquiring an infection or being malnourished, WHO said.
Practicing it for all babies for the first two years would save the
lives of more than 820,000 children each year, it said.
Revising nearly 30-year old advice, the WHO called on health workers
to help increase the rate of exclusive breastfeeding during the
first six months of life, which it estimated has stagnated at about
40 percent worldwide.
"The original 10 steps were really thought of a set of standards for
healthy, full-term babies. We are really saying that the key
principles behind the 10 steps also apply to premature infants, low
birth weight babies, sick babies," Grummer-Strawn said.
Mother and baby should be placed together "skin-to-skin" immediately
post-partum and not be separated in different rooms which hampers
breastfeeding, he said.
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At the same time, mothers should not be made to feel guilty if they
have to abandon breastfeeding, he added.
"Many women are not supported to get a good start at breastfeeding
and many women stop breastfeeding much earlier than they were
planning. So support is of the essence," said Dr Victor M. Aguayo,
chief of UNICEF's nutrition program.
Health facilities should adhere to the 1981 international code of
marketing of breast-milk substitutes, which says infant formula
should be available when needed, but not be promoted. Maternity
wards should not distribute free samples, it says.
The infant formula market is expanding rapidly, from an estimated
value of $44 billion in 2014 that is forecast to reach $70 billion
by 2019, Grummer-Strawn said.
"So we're very concerned about the growth, particularly in east Asia
it's growing the fastest," he said.
(Reporting by Stephanie Nebehay; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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