Breastfeeding saves
lives after earthquake disaster
By Jane O'Brien
World Breastfeeding Week
begins 1 August
 |
In a developing country, a child who is
breastfed is almost three times more likely to survive infancy than
a child who is not breastfed. World Breastfeeding Week is observed
in over 120 countries by UNICEF and its partners. The aim is to
promote exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life,
which yields tremendous health benefits for children.
NEW YORK, USA, 31 July 2006 –
Breastfeeding gives children the best start in life. It protects
them from diseases such as diarrhoea and respiratory infections, and
provides all the nutrients that newborns need to stay healthy and
grow. If every child was exclusively breastfed for the first six
months of life, an estimated 1.5 million young lives would be saved.
And in emergency situations, this is especially true. |
When an earthquake struck Indonesia this May, hundreds
of thousands of people were left homeless. Mothers struggled to feed their
children and many were given supplies of formula milk. But as UNICEF’s
Emergency Nutrition Officer in Jogyakarta, Dorothy Foote, explains, that
may have done more harm than good.
“The environment is dirty, it’s dusty, and access to
clean water is limited. Women’s cooking facilities, where they would
normally boil water and wash their dishes, are not available. People are
cooking outside. Frequently people are eating from community kitchens, so
there’s a real loss of control over the cleanliness of the environment,”
she says. “It increases the likelihood that children will get sick from
what they are consuming. And the switch to formula also reduces the amount
of protection they get from the antibodies in the breast milk.”
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World Breastfeeding
Week 2006 marks the 25th anniversary of the International Code of
Marketing Breastmilk Substitutes. It aims to protect and promote
breastfeeding by prohibiting the advertising and aggressive
marketing of substitutes. At
Bantul Hospital in central Java, UNICEF’s Dr. Brian Sriprihastuti
has seen the evidence of how it can be harmful to switch to formula
milk, particularly during disasters. He says young babies are being
admitted suffering from dehydration due to diarrhoea caused by a
weakened immune system or from drinking formula mixed with
contaminated water.
“UNICEF promotes giving breast milk
[only] to children for the first six months of life because it has
antibodies that help the imbue system, and these cannot be found in
infant formula,” he says. |
More than 80 per cent of affected
households have received powder milk since the earthquake – double the
normal consumption. Not only can that have an adverse effect on babies
under six months old, it also has economic implications.
Ms. Foote says that many women cannot afford formula, but their children
become dependent on supplies that have been donated.
“It will be more difficult for
woman to revert back to breastfeeding,” she says. “It’s better that,
instead of receiving formula, a woman is given encouragement to continue
breastfeeding and receives extra food and water herself, so that she
doesn’t worry about her breast milk drying up.
“So we want to be able to support young
mothers to continue to breastfeed and understand that this is really the
best thing that they could do for their baby in adverse circumstances.”
UNICEF has trained 100 women to be
breastfeeding peer counsellors in an initiative to promote continued
breastfeeding for children. They will visit mothers with infants who are
particularly vulnerable to disease and will encourage all mothers to give
their babies the best start to their new lives.
Source:
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/indonesia_35137.html |