INFANT NUTRITION: WHO/Unicef report reveals how companies violate global standards in the marketing of formula milk to parents

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INFANT NUTRITION: WHO/Unicef report reveals how companies violate global standards in the marketing of formula milk to parents
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A landmark new report reflecting ‘the most complete picture to date’ of the marketing of formula milk to mothers and health professionals around the world, including in SA, says that 51% of parents and pregnant women have been targeted by companies that produce breast-milk substitutes, even though this violates international standards on infant feeding – and is illegal in SA.

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How marketing of formula milk influences our decisions on infant feeding

This is because formula-milk feeding undermines breastfeeding, which the WHO and Unicef recommend for all babies where possible, including those of HIV-positive mothers: Ideally, babies should be breastfed within one hour of birth, then exclusively breastfed for their first six months – this means no water, no formula, or any other liquid or solid – with continued breastfeeding alongside the introduction of nutritious solid foods up to age two.

and aims to protect and promote breastfeeding by regulating the inappropriate marketing of breast-milk substitutes for children aged 0-3 years, removing “commercial pressures”, “conflicts of interest” and “perverse incentives” from the infant-feeding arena. The WHO acknowledges that cultural, psychological and socioeconomic factors also drive low rates of breastfeeding.

Still, Doherty says, “There’s no way a [marketing] representative could walk into any public sector hospital and try and market formula, whereas it’s completely rampant in the private sector.”

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