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How to Empower Women to Combine Work with Breastfeeding and Raising Their Children

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Human Wrongs Watch

Breastfeeding is one of the most cost-effective ways to boost children’s health. World Breastfeeding Week 2015 (1-7 July) aims to empower women to combine work with breastfeeding and raising their children.*

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© UNICEF/NYHQ2014–3655/Nesbitt | (Left) Elsebeth Aklilu weighs a child at a local health post. A government-paid health worker, Ms. Aklilu serves her own community — a village called Maderia, in Oromia Region, Ethiopia — by educating women on ways to keep themselves and their children healthy.

© UNICEF/NYHQ2014–3660/Nesbitt | Reversing the multidimensional causes of malnutrition — such as a lack of proper nutrition, breastfeeding, or family planning practices — is a large component of her work.

“I want to see the changes. That’s what keeps me in this job,” she says.

© UNICEF/NYHQ2014–3667/Nesbitt | Ms. Aklilu counsels Kedo Abdula, whose family planning helps her stay healthy while caring for and breastfeeding her 21-month-old daughter.

“My mother didn’t plan her children,” she says, “and I can see the differences between my childhood and my daughter’s.”

© UNICEF/NYHQ2014–3659/Nesbitt | Ms. Aklilu references a family health card while counselling a woman. The cards chart the health of a family’s children and also contain educational information about best health practices for children, including breastfeeding, as well as for the entire family.

© UNICEF/NYHQ2014–3654/Nesbitt | In addition to her tireless dedication to the children and women in her community, Ms. Aklilu makes time to use her knowledge to improve her own family’s health. Taking a break from work, she breastfeeds her 10-month-old son, Fikir Mekete

 *Source: UNICEF. Go to Original.

Breastfeeding**

© UNICEF
Making room for nursing mothers helps boost breastfeeding rates. Watch this animation about a campaign in China to do just that: Ten Square Metres of Love.

Check out a photo essay for World Breastfeeding Week 2015 which aims to empower women to combine work with breastfeeding and raising their children.

World Breastfeeding Week, celebrated this year from 1-7 August, is an annual event highlighting the critical importance of breastfeeding for children across the globe.  Breastfeeding gives children the healthiest start in life and is one of the simplest, smartest and most cost-effective ways we have of ensuring that all children survive and thrive.

The theme of this year’s World Breastfeeding Week is ‘Women and work – Let’s make it work’ which emphasizes the need for better support systems and policies to enable working mothers to breastfeed.

There are approximately 830 million women workers in the world. Many of them return to work soon after delivering babies, and they need supportive national polices and legislation – such as paid maternity leave and breastfeeding breaks – to enable them to continue breastfeeding.

There are also millions more women working in the informal, seasonal or part-time economy who face even greater barriers to breastfeeding.  They need strong family and community support to manage the demands of work and breastfeeding their babies.

Providing this support is the right thing to do for both babies and mothers: breastfeeding prevents infant death, childhood illness and non-communicable diseases, while supporting brain development and protecting maternal health. It also makes good economic sense. Women who have adequate maternity benefits value their employers, leading to increased productivity, job satisfaction and loyalty.

UNICEF is working to support national governments in making the world a friendlier place for all mothers who wish to breastfeed.

Impact on child survival and global situation

In the last two decades, child mortality has decreased considerably, but close to 7 million children under five years of age still die each year, mainly from preventable causes.

Of those, newborn deaths now represent nearly half of all child deaths under five years.  Immediate breastfeeding – putting the baby to the mother’s breast within an hour after birth – would significantly reduce neonatal mortality.

Early and exclusive breastfeeding helps children survive, but it also supports healthy brain development, improves cognitive performance and is associated with better educational achievement at age 5. Breastfeeding is the foundation of good nutrition and protects children against disease.

In this way, breastfeeding allows all children to thrive and develop to their full potential. Yet, less than half of the world’s newborns benefit from early breastfeeding and even fewer are exclusively breastfed for the first six months.

Optimal breastfeeding of infants under two years of age has the greatest potential impact on child survival of all preventive interventions, with the potential to prevent over 800,000 deaths (13 per cent of all deaths) in children under five in the developing world (Lancet 2013). ”

Breastfed children have at least six times greater chance of survival in the early months than non-breastfed children.

An exclusively breastfed child is 14 times less likely to die in the first six months than a non-breastfed child, and breastfeeding drastically reduces deaths from acute respiratory infection and diarrhoea, two major child killers (Lancet 2008).

The potential impact of optimal breastfeeding practices is especially important in developing country situations with a high burden of disease and low access to clean water and sanitation.

But non-breastfed children in industrialized countries are also at greater risk of dying – a recent study of post-neonatal mortality in the United States found a 25% increase in mortality among non-breastfed infants. In the UK Millennium Cohort Survey, six months of exclusive breast feeding was associated with a 53% decrease in hospital admissions for diarrhoea and a 27% decrease in respiratory tract infections.

While breastfeeding rates are no longer declining at the global level, with many countries experiencing significant increases in the last decade, only 39 per cent of children less than six months of age in the developing world are exclusively breastfed and just 58 per cent of 20-23 month olds benefit from the practice of continued breastfeeding. A growing number of countries are demonstrating that significant and rapid progress is possible, with 25 countries showing increases of 20 percentage points or more.

Breastfeeding is for every creature in this animated short from China.

Recommendations for optimal breastfeeding


The World Health Organization and UNICEF recommendations on breastfeeding are as follows: initiation of breastfeeding within the first hour after the birth; exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months; and continued breastfeeding for two years or more, together with safe, nutritionally adequate, age appropriate, responsive complementary feeding starting in the sixth month.

Benefits of breastfeeding


Breastfeeding has an extraordinary range of benefits
. It has profound impact on a child’s survival, health, nutrition and development. Breast milk provides all of the nutrients, vitamins and minerals an infant needs for growth for the first six months, and no other liquids or food are needed.

In addition, breast milk carries antibodies from the mother that help combat disease.  The act of breastfeeding itself stimulates proper growth of the mouth and jaw, and secretion of hormones for digestion and satiety.

Breastfeeding creates a special bond between mother and baby and the interaction between the mother and child during breastfeeding has positive repercussions for life, in terms of stimulation, behaviour, speech, sense of wellbeing and security and how the child relates to other people.

Breastfeeding also lowers the risk of chronic conditions later in life, such as obesity, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, diabetes, childhood asthma and childhood leukaemias. Studies have shown that breastfed infants do better on intelligence and behaviour tests into adulthood than formula-fed babies.

Virtually every mother can breastfeed, if given appropriate support, advice and encouragement, as well as practical assistance to resolve any problems.

Studies have shown that early skin to skin contact between mothers and babies, frequent and unrestricted breast feeding to ensure continued production of milk and help with positioning and attaching the baby increase the chances of breast feeding being successful.

Breastfeeding also contributes to maternal health immediately after the delivery because it helps reduce the risk of post-partum haemorrhage.

In the short term, breastfeeding delays the return to fertility and in the long term, it reduces type 2 diabetes and breast, uterine and ovarian cancer. Studies have also found an association between early cessation of breastfeeding and post natal depression in mothers.

Breastfed, best fed: Less than half of the world’s newborns benefit from the cost-effective intervention for saving their lives: breastfeeding. View these photos.

Risks of mixed feeding

Mixed feeding, or giving other liquids and/or foods together with breast milk to infants under 6 months of age, is widespread in many countries.

This practice poses risks to an infant’s health because it can increase the chance of their getting diarrhea and other infectious diseases. Mixed feeding, especially giving water or other liquids, can also causes the supply of breast milk to decrease as the baby sucks less at the breast.

Babies do not need liquids other than breastmilk, not even water, in the first 6 months as breastmilk contains all the water a baby needs, even in very hot climates.

Mixed feeding increases the risk of mother to child transmission of HIV. Exclusive breastfeeding for up to six months was associated with a three to four fold decreased risk of transmission of HIV compared to mixed feeding breastfeeding in several African studies.

Learn about breast milk banks for Brazil’s premature babies

Risks of artificial feeding

In many countries, the reinforcement of a “breastfeeding culture” and its vigorous defense against incursions of a “formula-feeding culture” is imperative.

Many mothers neither exclusively breastfeed for the first six months of the baby’s life nor continue breastfeeding for the recommended two years or more, and instead replace breast milk with commercial breastmilk substitutes or other milks.

Artificial feeding is expensive and carries risks of additional illness and death, particularly where the levels of infectious disease are high and access to safe water is poor.

Formula-feeding poses many practical challenges for mothers in developing countries, including ensuring the formula is mixed with clean water, that dilution is correct, that sufficient quantities of formula can continually be acquired and that the feeding utensils, especially if bottles are used, can be adequately cleaned.

Formula is not an acceptable substitute for breastmilk because formula, at its best, only replaces most of the nutritional components of breast milk: it is just a food, whereas breast milk is a complex living nutritional fluid containing anti-bodies, enzymes, long chain fatty acids and hormones, many of which simply cannot be included in formula.

Furthermore, in the first few months, it is hard for the baby’s gut to absorb anything other than breastmilk. Even one feeding of formula or other foods can cause injuries to the gut, taking weeks for the baby to recover.

The major problems are the societal and commercial pressure to stop breastfeeding, including aggressive marketing and promotion by formula producers. These pressures are too often worsened by inaccurate medical advice from health workers who lack proper skills and training in breastfeeding support.

In addition, many women have to return to work soon after delivery, and they face a number of challenges and pressures which often lead them to stop exclusive breastfeeding early. Working mothers need support, including legislative measures, to enable them to continue breastfeeding.


UNICEF supports countries to implement the priority actions outlined in the Global Strategy for Infant and Young Child Feeding. The focus in countries is on five major areas:

1. At national level: ensuring that not only is appropriate policies and legislation in place but that these are implemented and enforced.  This includes support for: 

  • development and implementation of national infant and young child feeding policies and strategy frameworks, 
  • development and implementation of programme plans to operationalize the strategy, 
  • development and enforcement of appropriate legislation (such as the International Code of Marketing of Breast milk Substitutes and maternity protection legislation).
  • Encouraging and facilitating strategic public and private partnerships with other international and country-level actors for improvement of infant and young child nutrition

2. Health system level: support is provided to institutionalize  interventions in the health system, such as the Ten Steps to Successful Breastfeeding and the Baby-Friendly Hospital Initiative (BFHI), curricula, training and support of health workers and health information systems.

Resources, jointly produced with the World Health Organization, include the BFHI training course and an Integrated Course on IYCF Counseling.

3. Community level: support is provided for community-based IYCF counseling, communication and mother support activities involving for example community health workers, lay counselors and mother to mother support groups (see the page on community IYCF).

4. Communication and advocacy activities on breastfeeding are also a key component of UNICEF support. UNICEF supports countries to conduct formative research, which is used to feed into the design of strategies for social and behavior change communication, and UNICEF supports the implementation of the strategies through multiple communication channels. 

World Breastfeeding Week is an annual advocacy event celebrated around the world with support from UNICEF, WHO and other partners.

5. IYCF in especially difficult circumstances: UNICEF supports interventions to address infant feeding in emergencies and infant feeding in the context of HIV/AIDS.

Breastfeeding Saves More Lives Than Any Other Preventive Intervention!

(**Source: UNICEF. Go to Original)

2015 Human Wrongs Watch


Source: http://human-wrongs-watch.net/2015/08/02/how-to-empower-women-to-combine-work-with-breastfeeding-and-raising-their-children/


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