The lovely people from Family Friendly Working have a draw for a Boppy breastfeeding pillow that ends today at 2.45.
All you have to do is comment on the page here:
http://www.familyfriendlyworking.co.uk/2010/08/27/win-a-boppy-breastfeeding-pillow/
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All you have to do is comment on the page here: http://www.familyfriendlyworking.co.uk/2010/08/27/win-a-boppy-breastfeeding-pillow/ Should Breastfeeding Be Taught In Elementary School?Posted by ceridwen on September 7th, 2010 at 8:42 am
Here’s how it should go: As a part of the basic biology curriculum, children are taught about breastfeeding. How the milk comes in. What’s in it. How it helps the baby. Students see pictures of women of multiple ethnicities breastfeeding. There’s a homework assignment and several questions on a test. Twenty or thirty years later these kids, now fully grown new parents, may not even remember Ms. Morris’ biology class, but there might just be one less mental hurdle to breastfeeding. The website Nursing Freedom ran a piece last week called, “Why Children Should Witness Breastfeeding in Public.” Here’s a line I liked: “We need to make nursing in public so boring, so quotidian, that it garners no more of a glance or second thought than seeing someone drinking a coffee or hugging a friend in public.” I read this on Friday and over the weekend kept thinking about public breastfeeding. Usually this issue comes up when some ignorant manager of a mediocre eatery stupidly asks a nursing mother to cover up and then has to endure all kinds of grief, including being read to from state laws concerning breastfeeding in public and/or local press coverage of a “nurse in” in which a posse of breastfeeders show up and breastfeed in front of or inside the establishment. I support a woman’s choice to breastfeed in public. If breastfeeding is kept out of sight, no one sees it. No one sees it and it’s mysterious. It’s mysterious and people feel weird about breastfeeding. And on the feedback loop goes. More exposure would make the sight of breastfeeding “boring.” Or normal. But then I saw a new mom in the park nursing under a kind of nursing tent/cover-all. It was a pretty cool-looking gizmo and propped up so that the baby could nurse privately without a blanket literally plastered over his or her face. I thought about the feedback loop and wondered whether this mother should just toss this fancy tent aside to help the rest of us get over our baggage. Then I thought back to when I first had my baby. I was quite engorged and it wasn’t the hot kind of engorged, the fake boob kind. It was the, Wow, how’s your back doing? kind. I won’t tell you the cup size, but let’s just say many people I do tell had no idea that size even existed. My over-supply meant that milk would often squirt out all over the minute I started unfastening things. The idea of doing all of this in public– as much as I supported the idea in theory– was hard. After a few months when I’d gotten it all down, I nursed at friends’ houses, in restaurants and parks discreetly and without much fuss or a blanket. But at first I felt like this was all nobody’s business. I also felt a little cranky about the situation. Why do I have to change attitudes about public breastfeeding?? It’s hard enough learning all these new things. Do I have to change public opinion at the same time? This is how I came to the breastfeeding in school concept. If Bill Maher and others had seen breastfeeding when they were kids, and been taught that it’s a normal part of life, like digesting or breathing, maybe there wouldn’t be so many snickers. Get to the kids before they get to the giggling stage– teaching teens about breastfeeding is also a great idea but by then too much squeamishness has settled in. The sooner the better. The Bundle Jungle are pleased to announce that their charity auction in aid of Cheshire and North wales human milk bank is officially open for bids!
Items on offer include: All items start at just 99 pence with NO RESERVE. Come on over to The Bundle Jungle pregnancy and parenting forum now, sign up for your FREE account and get bidding! It’s all for a great cause and there are some serious bargains to be had.
Elle Charlotte Keating ENGLAND was originally founded in 2001 as a high end womenswear clothing company and couture bridal wear. In 2008, Charlotte gave birth to her daughter Béa and during her 14 months breastfeeding, she designed and launched a new mother and baby range specialising in feminine, flattering nursing clothes for breastfeeding with confidence, discretion and style. Designs double up as fabulous maternity wear which fit & flatter through to full term pregnancy. Born from personal experience, the brand now includes a complementary selection of mummy essentials, baby, toddler and nursery décor range.
Feminine, flattering nursing clothes for breastfeeding with confidence, discretion and style. Designs double up as fabulous maternity wear which fit & flatter through to full term pregnancy. Born from personal experience, the brand now includes a complementary selection of mummy essentials, baby, toddler and nursery décor range. This is a compilation of a load of questions I have answered and problems I have encountered, both myself and with other mothers. That this stuff isn’t common knowledge anymore is a sad state of affairs, but, the fact is, it’s not, so loony lactivists like me have to put it together and put it out there, so here it it, why breastfeeding fails; This is not new news, Michel Odent has been saying this for 30 years, but it hasn’t been taken seriously, and still isn’t now. I did have a synto injection after I had my eldest, and bled out 850mls. When I had my youngest I opted for a physiological third stage (no synto injection to expel the placenta), including not clamping and cutting the cord until it had stopped pulsing, and I hardly bled at all. I know this is anecdotal, but the reasoning works this way; when the cord is left to stop pulsing before it is clamped and cut, not only does the baby get it’s full quota of blood [about 250mls/half a pint is in the placenta & cord] but the placenta drains, which may make it detach better, resulting in less bleeding. Opiates (pethidine etc) and all pain relief, even epidurals and gas and air cross the placenta and effect the baby. http://www.breastfeeding.asn.au/bfinfo/choice.html “The labour pain-reducing drug, pethidine, also interferes with this tentative, yet alert, exploratory behaviour by the infant. A newborn whose mother has received pethidine during labour can be dopey, unresponsive and disinterested in the breast. Studies have shown that newborns exposed to pethidine have poor arousability for up to three hours after delivery. Poor arousability means there is slowness in the central nervous system and delayed and depressed rooting behaviour and suckling. The effects of pethidine can last for a long time – the elimination half-life of pethidine in a newborn is about 22 hours, compared with three hours in a mother.” “In addition, pethidine readily crosses the placenta; if the drug is given too near the time of delivery, it can delay breathing at birth, make feeding difficult and cause the baby to be very drowsy. There is an antidote available, naloxone, which can be injected into the umbilical vein at birth, but it is not always given.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/6161727.stm “The researchers, led by Dr Siranda Torvaldsen, say: “There is a growing body of evidence that the fentanyl component of epidurals may be associated with sleepy infants and difficulty establishing breastfeeding.” http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/4371552.stm “A review of 21 studies comparing epidurals to other forms of pain relief showed women who chose them were 40% more likely to need intervention. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/health/1423668.stm “However, babies whose mothers were given a low-dose epidural took longer to become vigorous after delivery, and a few of the babies in the low-dose infusion group were more likely to require breathing assistance.” 2. Separation. Skin-to-Skin is important, washing, swaddling, dressing and testing done away from the mother all inhibit reactions and instinct. Left alone a baby will instinctively root and suckle. Breast Crawl http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pjDQN9keKQk “When the mother and midwife tried to help him latch on, he closed his mouth firmly and arched his back, pulling his head away from the breast. And these; http://www.lpch.org/DiseaseHealthInfo/HealthLibrary/pregnant/0008-pop.html are really good examples of how not to get a baby to feed, holding the head like this is really, really bad practice! These holds make babies flail their arms and arch away from the boob, holding a baby by the back of the head, or at the back of the neck as is commonly taught actually works against instinctive feeding behaviours. But this kind of approach; http://www.biologicalnurturing.com/pdfs/Colson%202007%20non%20prescriptive%20recipe%20for%20BF%20put%20with%20recipe.pdf 3. Expectations. http://www.iwantmymum.com/site/articles/the-sleep-of-reason/20 “Tell parents the stark reality of life with a newborn, rather than forcing them to question their instincts…………… But here’s the thing. Young babies are not meant to sleep through: that’s the harsh and horrible truth. They have a very real and primal need to know their mothers are close, that they are safe. Their tummies are tiny and so cannot hold much milk, so they get hungry often. And breast-milk – which, remember, is the natural food of babies – is extremely easy to digest so as not to put undue strain on an immature system. All of this adds up to a baby who wakes during the night. Darn those babies for not being self-sufficient. So; Expect your baby to want to feed, seemingly all the time, for the first few weeks. No baby in the whole world ever goes 3-4 hours between feeds happily or naturally. A breastfed baby is more likely to want to feed every hour or so, and there’s nothing wrong with comfort sucking. It’s natural, it’s normal and it’s good for the baby and your milk supply. A newborns tummy is the size of it’s clenched fist, ie, very tiny. It is easily filled and quickly emptied, so needs to be re-filled regularly. Allowing your baby to “comfort suck” means s/he is constantly topping up this tiny tummy. Contrary to popular wisdom babies can also suck and feed whilst they are dozing, so if your baby seems to be asleep, but is still sucking gently, then leave him/her there. They are only deeply asleep if they relax totally and voluntarily let go of the nipple. Expect to get very little sleep for the first few weeks, especially if your baby is sleeping in a separate cot or moses basket. A newborn baby that can’t feel and smell it’s mother is an unhappy newborn baby. They have an instinctive need to be held and kept close. So, expect your baby to want to be held all the time, either by you or by Daddy, or grandma or grandpa, or, well, anyone really, as long as they are warm and have a comforting heartbeat! Expect growth spurts at 10 days, 3 weeks, 6 weeks, 12 weeks and again about 18-20 weeks, ride out the feeding frenzy and you’re baby will settle again in a few days. But don’t expect to feed your baby every 3-4 hours and then change them and put them down and walk away. You are confusing them with a Baby Annabel doll…… ☺ 4. Bad Advice. “You’ll spoil that baby” “Your milk isn’t [good] enough” “S/he’ll be more settled on formula” “Feed 10 minutes from each boob, no more” “You have to drink milk to make milk” “You must eat extra healthy now, or your milk will be poor quality” “Routine, routine, routine…….” I’m sure you’ve already heard some of these, and will undoubtedly hear others too. You’ll know if it’s garbage because it’ll go against your instincts and sound ridiculous! 5. Nipple Confusion. Caused by dummies and bottles.http://www.breastfeeding.com/all_about/all_about_confusion.html “What is Nipple Confusion? It is a problem that arises when a breastfed baby is given an artificial (rubber or silicon) nipple and must try to learn to nurse both from his mother’s breast and the bottle nipple. While seemingly similar, these two feeding methods require completely different mouth and tongue motions and swallowing skills. In breastfeeding, the baby needs to take as much of the nipple and areola into his mouth as possible to ‘pump’ the milk from the milk ducts. In bottle feeding, he uses his lips to grip the tip of an artificial nipple. Some nipples do better to imitate a natural breast, but none are quiet the same.” So, now you know what not to do, what not to expect and what advice to not listen to! (This can also be found as a Guest post at; http://jonirae.com/got-milk-part-three-why-breastfeeding-fails/) Amanda Rayment works as a herbalist in the arena of the parent and child relationship. She is also the tutor for the training programme Birth and loving Relationships. Her website is http://www.welcomeworldcafe.com
For most of us sometimes we can rest back in the flow of harmony of what is natural and effortless. Other times it seems as if that flow is a distant memory and everything feels tiring. Those moments of not knowing how to respond are opportunities to stop for a moment and to ask inwardly to be shown, to acknowledge to ourselves we have become confused as to what the communication of love is. To recognise that love is not sacrifice in any form no matter how we try to disguise it. To ask love to reveal itself, to show us how to give to our child the nurturing and nourishment we want to know and receive for ourselves. Then we have come back to our true nature of recognising tenderness, happiness and nurturing is shared. That love includes everyone. My encouragement to breastfeeding mothers alongside these inner practices is to ask yourself what makes your heart sing with joy, to give yourself the time to offer this gift of love to yourself, to include this in your life no matter how busy it seems right now .Again I recognise resistances my come forward that it isn’t always easy to include ourselves. But that doesn’t mean that we don’t give it ago and see what occurs as the outcome of being kind and gentle with our selves. My craft is herbal medicine and producing herbal tea formulas makes my heart sing. On my website I offer different tea formulas for mothering. The website has lots of information about herbs and mothering. There is a cafe area where you can ask questions. The tea Mamas Nursing support is available which many women have found helpful while breastfeeding. This is a formula i have used for years with breastfeeding mothers both in my clinic and in the welcome World tea range. This tea is formulated with herbs that nourish on many different levels and also gently stimulates the blood supply to the mammary glands ensuring a healthy flow of breast milk. http://www.welcomeworldcafe.com Herbs that assist with breastfeeding are Red raspberry leaf ,fennel seeds ,nettles, holy thistle, fenugreek seeds , goats rue.“ The following herbs may also be helpful to have in your kitchen cupboard or medicine bag. Marigold flowers; useful for any inflammation of breasts when feeding e.g. with engorgement or mastitis. This plant is also wonderfully soothing for cracked nipples. Again go to http://www.welcomeworldcafe.com for information about marigold {look under notes from Amanda in cafe area } Ladys Mantle;A wonderful plant that can be used as an external compress for sore or inflamed breasts. Use the leaves to make a paste with a little oil i would choose castor oil, although olive oil would be fine. Again check http://www.welcomeworldcafe.com { look under writings 3 herbs I would always have in my apothecary in cafe area} There are of course many plants i could list here , my feeling is to keep it simple ,make friends with a few plants ,get to know their benefits, keep them in the kitchen cupboard and make nurturing cups of herbal tea. Use the plants as compresses and washes when assistance is needed. Enjoy and happy mothering. I wish that breastfeeding wasn’t such a “hot” topic. I wish that formula feeding wasn’t so common place and normal that people assume that the way a formula fed baby behaves is the way babies should behave. So that long deep sleeps in very small babies were not expected, instead of the hourly feeds, short naps and light sleep that is actually normal baby behaviour. That people knew that vomiting was not normal, that baby poo shouldn’t stink to high heaven and that reflux isn’t to be expected. There’s a big difference between posseting now and then, and regularly chucking back large amounts of milk. I wish people didn’t think that breastfeeding was the “Gold Standard”, but understood that it is simply the biological norm. What babies are meant to do, what boobs are for, and what gives our babies the things they need to grow up the way they were meant to. Physically, immunologically and emotionally. I wish people didn’t think it was fair game to pass comment on the health of breastfed babies. Or to take the piss out of breastfeeding mothers. Imagine if a breastfeeding mother passed comment on the health of a non-breastfed baby, or belittled a woman who didn’t breastfeed? That people realised that childhood illnesses are just that, a part of normal, everyday childhood, that all babies and children get colds, and coughs and chicken pox, and that breastfeeding is not a Magical Forcefield which stops your baby ever getting ill, but what it actually does is makes your child able to resist a lot of infections, and means they can fight off the ones they do get. All babies and children get sick, the more contact they have with others the more likely they are to get sick, so a breastfed baby in a nursery will still catch infections, where as a formula fed baby that stays at home won’t be in contact with those infections, and that’s why they seem to get sick less often, not because breastfeeding makes no difference. I wish I didn’t have to defend the fact that I breastfeed. Ever. To anyone. I wish people understood that advertising works. That formula manufacturers invented “Follow-On” formula to get through a loophole in the advertising laws, because all they care about is profit, how much of their product they can sell. That most of the “special” ingredients in artificial milks are not proven, not necessary and not there to improve the health of babies, but to make one formula seem “closer to breast-milk” than all the others. That artificial baby milks are not sterile, and subject to fewer and less rigid tests and standards than over-the-counter cold medications. I wish people understood that the risks that go with not breastfeeding are rarely instantly obvious, but can creep up and effect our health when we are 10, 20, or 30, or 40, or 50. Babies rarely drop dead from being formula fed (although it does happen in some cases, from contamination like in China, or from allergic reactions or gastroenteritis) but that it is, all the same, a large scale public health issue that needs to be viewed seriously, not as a life style choice or as a fashion statement. I wish breastfeeding was normal.
The NHS would like to have Mama Packs…. We know, as each time we call a maternity ward they jump at it. Then a few hours later ‘that’ phonecall comes…. “Sorry, we will have to decline as apparently Bounty are the only packs permitted to be distributed by the NHS” Why?
What happened to Monopoly / Monopsony laws? Why are Bounty permitted to carry on this coercive monopoly? SADLY this also means that no cloth nappies or alternative detergents are permitted into the ‘new Mama zone’ in hospitals as Bounty are contracted to only allow Pampers and Fairy! Mama packs contain Soap nuts and cloth nappy info! [hopefully one day maybe even a free newborn cloth nappy] Mama Packs also contain BIODEGRADABLE baby wipes… Another product denied to Mama’s in the current NHS permitted packs. We don’t want to remove Bounty from their throne but what we do want is for Mothers & Mothers to be to have a choice…. an ethical choice! This petition is a call to the powers that be behind the NHS to allow Mama Packs to be handed out in the NHS Maternity sector, be it via hospitals or GP surgeries…. GIVE WOMEN A CHOICE! Click on the link to sign the petition http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/mamapacks/
Sign up today for your FREE account and get posting those questions to be in with a chance! You might also be interested in previous Q&A sessions with Elizabeth Pantley, author of “The No Cry Sleep Solution” and Sue Gerhardt, author of “Why Love Matters” along with an upcoming Q&A with a a well known breastfeeding personality! How it works: Sign up, and post your question in the thread! Once you have posted your question it will be considered as an entry which will later be voted upon. The ten entries with the highest number of votes will then go on to have their questions answered by Gill Rapley within 1 week. Easy! Elle, I ‘meet’ lots of lovely people through Lactivist and this blog is from a South African mumwho blogs at Joyful Mamas Place. This week she is celebrating World Breastfeeding Week with guest bloggers and here is one of the posts. The rest of her site is well worth looking at too, the easiest way to navigate it is by the lables, there are some lovely posts about breastfeeding and some very interesting ones about toddler emotions but I do wish I hadn’t found this post for a Biscotti recipe! I love Biscotti a bit too much! http://www.joyfulmamasplace.blogspot.com/ SE7EN TIPS FOR NURSING IN PUBLIC by guest blogger Se7en!We are celebrating World Breastfeeding Week 2010 in style here on Joyful Mama’s Place this week! Today’s guest blogger is a mom to eight beautiful blessings, and the brains behind the fabulous blog SE7EN – The life and times of a homeschooling mother of se7en + 1! She and her family live in one of the most beautiful parts of Cape Town, and whenever she posts a picture of her children exploring rock pools in the middle of an *ordinary day*, I am green with envy!
Please pop in for a visit to her blog – I guarantee you will leave inspired.
Here are se7en tips I wish I had known, the first time round:
and the Se7en + 1th thing: This is from http://janeaustensworld.wordpress.com/2010/07/31/breast-feeding-in-the-early-19th-century/ a blog that brings Jane Austen, her novels, and the Regency Period alive through food, dress, social customs, and other 19th C. historical details. Be warned! the jane Austen World Blog is enormous and I easily lost a whole hour just browsing, there is lots of fascinating stuff about womens rights (or lack of them) in the Regency Era and links to other sites with eye opening articles about childbirth through history.
Generally, wet nurses were paid to feed the babies of the wealthy. Much thought and care went into their selection, and their milk was examined for texture, color, viscosity, and taste. Some thought that aspects of a wet nurse’s personality could be passed through her milk, and therefore her character had to be impeccable. Cassandra Austen, Jane Austen’s mother, sent all her children to the nearby village of Deane to be nursed in their infancy. Although Cassandra Austen visited her babies daily, they did not return to the family fold until they were around 18 months of age. The popularity of wet nurses stemmed from the fact that royalty often wanted large families. Wet nurses were hired to feed the newborn so that the royal mother would soon regain fertility and become pregnant again. When royals stopped breastfeeding their children, other women from wealthy families soon followed suit and began to farm their babies out to wet nurses. This practiced continued until the end of the 19th century, when it largely died out. http://gearybehaviourcenter.blogspot.com/2010/07/breastfeeding-and-reading-ability-some.html The data from Growing up in Ireland is becoming available for secondary analysis. It is a great resource which, hopefully, researchers in Ireland and elsewhere will take full advantage of. From time to time I will post some snapshots from the data. Mike Stones 1st May, 2008 Why does only one in 100 mums follow government advice to feed her baby solely on breast milk for the first six months? Mike Stones meets the woman determined to change that.‘Some women would march up Everest to breastfeed their baby. Others need support, and that’s the role of the Baby Cafe.’ Hyperbole is rare from the lips of Catherine Pardoe, co-founder of the Baby Cafe, a national network of drop-in centres dedicated to promoting breastfeeding. During a two-hour conversation almost all her comments are measured, even restrained – except this. Not even the dubious marketing tactics of formula milk manufacturers sparks a change in her tone. So, Pardoe’s opening remark underlines the depth of her passion, commitment and dedication – not to bully women into breastfeeding, but to give them the choice. It’s a choice often denied in modern society – denied by peer-group pressure, myths and the omnipresence of persuasive bottle feeding marketing campaigns. ‘Nine out of 10 women who stop breastfeeding in the first six weeks wanted to carry on,’ says 41-year-old Pardoe. For her it’s an exasperating statistic with profound consequences for the physical and psychological health of mothers, their children and the environment. Ultimately, it was a statistic that launched a quest to make breastfeeding more popular. After working as a staff nurse and lactation consultant she found the answer, along with co-founder Julie Williams, with the idea of Baby Cafes,offering support for mums who want to breastfeed. The first opened in Hayward’s Heath Health Centre, in 2000. Seven years later, there are nearly 100 Baby Cafes from Banff in Scotland to Peacehaven in Sussex, run by volunteers under strict rules set out by the Baby Cafe Charitable Trust. Applications for new cafes are strictly vetted and thoroughly supported with starter packs that contain advice on everything from health and safety to public relations. We are talking in Horley Baby Cafe, in rooms borrowed from the local infant school and against a rising tide of noise. Gathering in the room next door are mums, mums-to-be, infants and babies. Pushchairs are piling up outside; toddlers are grappling with building blocks and mums are chatting over coffee, tea and rock-cakes. The aim is friendly peer support for breastfeeding in a non-medical environment. Pardoe and her colleagues want to encourage a method of feeding babies that everyone – mothers, the medical establishment, the Government and even formula milk producers – agrees benefits mothers and babies. But it’s a tough challenge. Only one in 100 mothers follows Government advice and feeds her baby solely on breast milk for the first six months, according to the latest statistics, the Infant Feeding Survey 2005. Although nearly 80 per cent of mums started breastfeeding, only 21 per cent were still breastfeeding exclusively after six weeks, and more than half had stopped. By six months, three quarters of mothers had stopped breastfeeding completely. That’s despite overwhelming medical evidence that breastfeeding is better for the mother and her child. According to research published in the Health Education Journal (June 2006), it reduces the incidence of childhood diabetes, obesity, asthma, gastroenteritis and some types of childhood cancers, while boosting cognitive functioning. The United Nations Children’s Fund UNICEF estimates that better breastfeeding practises worldwide could save up to 1.5 million children a year. The best of the breast For mothers, breastfeeding facilitates the bonding process with babies and is said to protect against ovarian cancer, breast cancer and weak bone in later life. Pardoe also points to powerful psychological benefits from breast feeding, which often go unreported. ‘Stopping breastfeeding prematurely can cause a lot of grief that’s seldom acknowledged,’ she says. ‘People underestimate the damage. I’ve spoken to grandmothers in their 70s and their sense of loss at not breastfeeding is still with them.’ So why do so many women choose to replace nature’s free and finest with bought-in, bottle-delivered alternatives? I detect a glimmer of exasperation as Pardoe speaks. ‘For some women, particularly young, single mums on low incomes with poor education, breastfeeding is sometimes far down the agenda,’ she says. It’s so easy for worries about housing benefit or maintenance payments to take priority. Peer-group pressure, family opposition and the slick marketing campaigns of formula manufacturers all conspire to help women choose the bottle rather than the breast to feed their baby. Many first-time mums who choose to breastfeed report feelings of isolation and embarrassment in a society that seems sometimes openly hostile to the practice. Although it is illegal in Scotland to discriminate against breastfeeding women, no such law exists in Wales and England. Often the attitude of the new mum’s partner and mother can be critical in influencing her decision to continue breastfeeding or, more likely, to stop. Hit or myth? Then there is the multitude of myths that cloud the central truth that breast is best for babies, mother and the environment. Myths such as that there is little difference between modern infant formula milk and breast milk, which is believed by more than one-third of mothers according to Department of Health research. The reality is that infant formula milk does not contain the antibodies, living cells, enzymes or hormones present in breast milk. Myths such as that breastfeeding will ruin the shape of women’s breasts and bodies. In fact, breast feeding consumes 500 extra calories a day. Plus, medical advice suggests that it helps the womb return to its normal shape and doesn’t affect long term breast-shape. Myths such as that some women do not produce enough milk to be able to breastfeed. In reality, breastfeeding is a skill that takes practice. Given accurate information and support, virtually all women can breastfeed. Baby Cafe aim to provide that service for everyone – not just middle class mums who eat lentils and read The Guardian newspaper. ‘We want to put information about breast feeding back into the community. By taking the topic out of a medicalised, clinical setting we hope to make breastfeeding more accessible to as wide a range of women as possible,’ says Pardoe. ‘Sometimes cafes offer a safety-net for stressed, exhausted mothers who may be struggling to raise children alone on low incomes while perhaps grappling with undiagnosed post-natal depression.’Baby Cafe venues are critical to their success. You won’t find them in cold, dank, dark village halls where hardy souls huddle together over polystyrene cups of lukewarm, instant coffee. Instead they are located in bright, warm, comfortable community centres and schools. The accent is on pleasant surroundings to help mums relax in an atmosphere of mutual support. There’s always a room for private consultations and a baby changing area. The locations must be within easy reach of a bus route and with places to park in an area where women feel safe. ‘So, shall we go next door and meet the mums?’ suggests Pardoe. There’s no lull in the conversation as we walk into the room – the mums have been warned about my visit. There’s a warm aroma of good coffee, comfortable chairs and wall sheets on breastfeeding. The ground is littered with building blocks as toddlers practice their architectural skills. New mum Loukia explains how, after a painful nine weeks, she was about to give up breastfeeding when she discovered Horley Baby Cafe, ‘Since coming here, I’ve become much more confident about breastfeeding,’ she tells me. ‘My baby is happier, more settled and more confident. I know exactly what’s in my milk and feeding my baby creates a happy time for us both. When I was pregnant, I was bombarded with information about formula milk products. The Baby Cafe helps mothers resist the appalling commercial pressure to use them.’ Back in the adjoining room, I ask Pardoe whether she thinks the Government is doing enough to protect new mums against the rampant marketing tactics of formula milk manufacturers. Her reply is surprisingly pragmatic for one so resolutely committed to promoting breastfeeding. ‘The public sector faces its own constraints and bureaucracy,’ she says. ‘Plus, the Baby Cafe arose from generous support (£15,000) from the Department of Health. Given the nature of the public sector, the Government is probably as supportive as it could be.’ The undue influence of formula milk manufacturers is a threat the Government says it takes seriously. In January, in line with EU legislation, the Department of Health and the Food Standards Agency (FSA) introduced stricter controls on the labelling and advertising of all types of milk formula. The new rules are designed to help parents tell the difference between infant formula, which can be used for the first six months and beyond, and follow-on formula, for use only after the age of six months. Two days before the legislation was to come into force, the FSA received a legal challenge from the Infant and Dietetic Foods Association, which represents baby milk manufacturers. Its aim was to postpone the introduction of the legislation and to apply for a judicial review to test its legality. The challenge was upheld and product labels won’t change until 2010. A similar challenge mounted in Scotland was dismissed swiftly by the legislature. Whitehall has always ruled out a total ban on the promotion of formula milk, but it recently promised £150,000 a year for a national breastfeeding helpline, and its own advisers, the Scientific Advisory Committee on Nutrition, warned in February that more should be done to support breastfeeding. Some countries, such as Sweden, do ban the promotion of formula milk and report much higher rates of breastfeeding than the Uk. Could healthcare professionals do more? Again Pardoe is reluctant to criticise. ‘A lot could do more with management support, but you can’t lay the blame at anyone’s door within the health service.’ Pardoe is less forgiving of the formula milk manufacturers. She believes they are denying healthcare professionals’ independent, scientific information about their products. This lack of reliable information makes it hard for them to advise on the proper use of formula milk, and that can lead some women to stop breastfeeding prematurely. ‘At worst, the lack of independent scientific information about formula milk can lead manufacturers to collude with mothers to absolve them of responsibility for breastfeeding their babies,’ Pardoe warns. Her comments are resigned rather than angry. ‘There’s no point wasting your energy being angry with formula milk manufacturers. They’re commercial companies out to make a profit for their shareholders. They work within the law but don’t always abide by the World Heath Organization code.’ The WHO/UNICEF international code bans all promotion of bottle feeding and sets out requirements for labelling and information on infant feeding. ‘It would be great if every formula milk company were ethical, altruistic and had the best interests of mums and babies at heart, but there’s no money in that. Instead, they spend millions on advertising, phone lines and websites to produce non renewable, unsustainable, ethically suspect and highly branded products.That’s one thing we can learn from them – branding. We should re-brand breastfeeding to make it trendy.’ Outside I hear pushchairs departing. People are saying their goodbyes, but they’ll be back – for the fellowship of like-minded mothers, determined to breastfeed their babies despite the commercial and social pressures ranged against them. Why breast milk is the green choice • It’s a natural, renewable resource • There is no environmental contamination involved in its manufacture, processing, packaging, transportation, preparation, promotion or disposal • It is produced only in the quantities required Breastfeeding bonus ‘A woman’s decision to stop breastfeeding is only a choice if she has had the relevant information and viable options have been offered.’ The Baby cafe handbook ‘I breastfed for seven months and hardly ever came across other breastfeeding mums apart from at the Baby Cafe.’ Mum ‘It just feels like the right thing to do. It makes you feel so close to your baby and so special.’ Mum Helping breast beat bottle • WHO breastfeeding code should become law • Make public places more breastfeeding friendly • More paid leave for parents after birth • Support legislation making it illegal to discriminate against breastfeeding in England and Wales • Media and celebrity support for breastfeeding This article first appeared in the Ecologist May 2008 Flicking through July’s edition of Mother & Baby magazine, I was disturbed to find that more than Kathryn Blundell’s funbags were jumping off the page to offend my already overburdened senses. An entire page dedicated to “Organic” infant follow on formula.
…it claimed. And yet, breasts don’t produce hexane-extracted omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids (DHA/ARA [derived from algae and soil fungus]) nor have they been linked to illnesses such as virulent diarrhoea and vomiting in infants. Funny, that. Or not. Many mothers or mothers to be have found themselves lured in by the “Organic” claims, some even believing this makes it a real and viable alternative to breastmilk. But, just how organic is “Organic” formula? For any product to be certified organic at least 95% of ingredients, by weight, must be organic. Hmm. In 2008, Cornucopia.com reported that formula companies were being allowed to break the rules and general ethos of organics in pursuit of profits. They also reported adverse effects to some of the oils found in “Organic” formulas:
Reported to contain the following organic ingredients: Organic nonfat milk, Organic High Oleic Sunflower, Organic Soy and Organic Coconut Oils and Organic Corn Maltodextrin and Organic Sugar (Sucrose), “Organic” Formulas still contain many of the non-organic ingredients found in other infant formulas. Organic Sugar (Sucrose) is problematic in itself. There are growing concerns over the sweetness of “Organic” formulas and it’s potential to encourage babies to drink more. Dr. William J. Klish, director of the pediatric gastroenterology department at Baylor College of Medicine and a former chairman of the American Academy of Pediatrics’ nutrition committee had this to say:
And while Doctor Gary K. Beauchamp, director of the Monell Chemical Senses Center in Philadelphia, states that there is no solid proof that early exposure to sweetness leads to an increased taste for sugar in adulthood, he believes the practice of sweetening infant formulas to increase profits goes very much against the Organic ethos:
If you’ve read the list of non-organic ingredients, you will know that they make for sobering reading. 95% organic is not truly organic, particularly when the remaining 5% of ingredients are what make infant formula so problematic in the first place. Once again, it would appear, formula companies are taking part in highly unethical practices – from using harmful ingredients in their products to advertisements targeting breastfeeding mothers and now riling the organic community, it seems they will stop at nothing and their exploitation knows no bounds when it comes to making a quick buck. Elle, www.thebundlejungle.com External links and references:
Baby Cafe breastfeeding group meet Mondays 1.30 – 3.00, Cannock Chase Children’s Centre, Cannock Road, Staffordshire, WS11 5BU Tel: 01543 469894 Telephone trained peer supporters between 10am and 8pm daily for support with your breastfeeding on 07773 791119 We are also on Facebook ‘Cannock Breastfeeding Peer Support‘. The Breastfeeding Festival have a bundle of Lactivist goodies to give away. I so wish I could be there! Here is the line up so far, more is being added daily.The Breastfeeding Festival 16th to 22nd August 2010 Ulverston, Cumbria, England The Breastfeeding Festival’s events, 16th-22nd August 2010
About us
* All our events are FREE because we aim to be as accessible as possible.
* The festival is celebrating and promoting breastfeeding, aiming to increase breastfeeding rates and duration.
* We are a not-for-profit voluntary group, made up of mothers of small children, passionate about doing something exciting to change the world.
* We are not sponsored and we have raised all the funds ourselves through supporters’ generosity, so what you see here is what we love and what we think you’ll like, too, uninfluenced by outside commercial interests.
The Big Breastfeeding Picture
Tuesday 17th August, Ford Park. This event is in two parts.
First part – Workshop on the Breastfeeding Manifesto, 10am-12noon, Coach House, Ford Park.
Second part – The Big Breastfeeding Picture, 1pm-4pm, Ford Park. Be part of a huge people-picture of a mother feeding her baby. Inspired by Art for the Sky, this promises to be spectacular. Please let us know you’re coming if you can! The Madonna and Child Project
by Kate Hansen, Tuesday 17th – Saturday 28th August, 9:30am – 5:30pm, Bleach House Gallery, LMB Design, 3 Quay Street.
An exhibition of beautiful, iconic mother and baby portrait prints with associated birth stories, by Canadian artist Kate Hansen. We’re delighted to be the first to show this exhibition outside Canada. Breastfeeding Fair
Saturday 21st August, 1:30pm-4:30pm, Supper Room in the Coronation Hall.
Loads of great things all in one place, with something for everyone! Plus, live music from Sedleigh Adams!
Stalls from charities and campaign groups including: Baby Milk Action Breastfeeding Manifesto Coalition United Kingdom Association for Milk Banking
Businesses including information from: Bibs n Bots Boobie Buddies Ltd Lait d’Amour Mama Packs
Children’s books including: books from the Katie Morag series by Mairi Hedderwick ‘The Wonderful Place’ by Chrissy Butler
Resources for peer supporters
Communal weave craft workshop. Talk to us!
Market stalls, Thursday 19th and Saturday 21st August, Market Place.
Peer supporters get together, Friday 20th August 11am, Home and Finance Café. Please come along for a chat whether you’re a peer supporter or just considering it.
End of festival get together, Sunday 22nd August 2pm, Gillam’s Tea room Tell us what you enjoyed, and contribute you ideas for next year’s festival. Workshops
Children’s Centre, Lund Terrace
Breastfeeding info for Grannies, Monday 3-4pm and Tuesday 7-8pm
Breastfeeding, including a presentation from The Food of Love: your formula for successful breastfeeding, put together by the book’s author, Kate Evans. Wednesday 3-4pm and Thursday 7-8pm
Baby-led weaning, by Gill Rapley and Tracey Murkett, authors of Baby-Led Weaning: helping your baby to love good food, Friday and Saturday 3-4pm
Milk banking, Precious milk for precious babies – an update on breastmilk banking at home and abroad, by Gillian Weaver, Chair of the United Kingdom Association for Milk Banking, Saturday 11am-12noon Listen while you work
Thursday 19th August 3pm, Parish Rooms, Church Walk.
Knit breasts to donate to hospitals for breastfeeding demonstrations, while listening to radio documentary Breastfeeding Beyond Infancy, produced by Knitwise Media. Bring your own needles and wool if you have them. Formula for Disaster
Friday 20th August, 7:30pm, Parish Rooms, Church Walk.
Watch this documentary by Unicef Philippines on the promotion of infant formula in the Philippines, followed by a presentation about the Baby Feeding Law Group by Mike Brady, Campaigns and Networking Co-ordinator for Baby Milk Action. Baby Milk Action is the Secretariat of the Baby Feeding Law Group. Mama and Hathor: mother and superhero
By Heather Cushman-Dowdie, Wednesday 18th August, 7:30pm, Parish Rooms, Church Walk.
A talk about Hathor the Cow Goddess and Mama is, the breastfeeding comics, recorded specially for the festival by the wonderfully talented American mother and comic artist. Mother’s Milk
Award-winning short film by Kevin Douglas West, Saturday 21st August, 7pm-8pm, Children’s Centre, Lund Terrace
A short film about milk banking, followed by a presentation by Gillian Weaver, Chair of the United Kingdom Association for Milk Banking, about milk banking following bereavement http://www.bobrow.net/kimberly/birth/BFLanguage.html Watch Your Language! “The truth is, breastfeeding is nothing more than normal. Artificial feeding, which is neither the same nor superior, is therefore deficient, incomplete, and inferior. These are difficult words, but they have an appropriate place in our vocabulary.” The lactation consultant says, “You have the best chance to provide your baby with the best possible start in life, through the special bond of breastfeeding. The wonderful advantages to you and your baby will last a lifetime.” And then the mother bottlefeeds. Why? In part because that sales pitch could just as easily have come from a commercial baby milk pamphlet. When our phrasing and that of the baby milk industry are interchangeable, one of us is going about it wrong…and it probably isn’t the multinationals. Here is some of the language that I think subverts our good intentions every time we use it. Best possible, ideal, optimal, perfect. Are you the best possible parent? Is your home life ideal? Do you provide optimal meals? Of course not. Those are admirable goals, not minimum standards. Let’s rephrase. Is your parenting inadequate? Is your home life subnormal? Do you provide deficient meals? Now it hurts. You may not expect to be far above normal, but you certainly don’t want to be below normal. When we (and the artificial milk manufacturers) say that breastfeeding is the best possible way to feed babies because it provides their ideal food, perfectly balanced for optimal infant nutrition, the logical response is, “So what?” Our own experience tells us that optimal is not necessary. Normal is fine, and implied in this language is the absolute normalcy–and thus safety and adequacy–of artificial feeding. The truth is, breastfeeding is nothing more than normal. Artificial feeding, which is neither the same nor superior, is therefore deficient, incomplete, and inferior. Those are difficult words, but they have an appropriate place in our vocabulary. Advantages. When we talk about the advantages of breastfeeding–the “lower rates” of cancer, the “reduced risk” of allergies, the “enhanced” bonding, the “stronger” immune system–we reinforce bottlefeeding yet again as the accepted, acceptable norm. Health comparisons use a biological, not cultural, norm, whether the deviation is harmful or helpful. Smokers have higher rates of illness; increasing prenatal folic acid may reduce fetal defects. Because breastfeeding is the biological norm, breastfed babies are not “healthier;” artificially-fed babies are ill more often and more seriously. Breastfed babies do not “smell better;” artificial feeding results in an abnormal and unpleasant odor that reflects problems in an infant’s gut. We cannot expect to create a breastfeeding culture if we do not insist on a breastfeeding model of health in both our language and our literature. We must not let inverted phrasing by the media and by our peers go unchallenged. When we fail to describe the hazards of artificial feeding, we deprive mothers of crucial decision-making information. The mother having difficulty with breastfeeding may not seek help just to achieve a “special bonus;” but she may clamor for help if she knows how much she and her baby stand to lose. She is less likely to use artificial milk just “to get him used to a bottle” if she knows that the contents of that bottle cause harm. Nowhere is the comfortable illusion of bottlefed normalcy more carefully preserved than in discussions of cognitive development. When I ask groups of health professionals if they are familiar with the study on parental smoking and IQ (1), someone always tells me that the children of smoking mothers had “lower IQs.” When I ask about the study of premature infants fed either human milk or artificial milk (2), someone always knows that the breastmilk-fed babies were “smarter.” I have never seen either study presented any other way by the media–or even by the authors themselves. Even health professionals are shocked when I rephrase the results using breastfeeding as the norm: the artificially-fed children, like children of smokers, had lower IQs. Inverting reality becomes even more misleading when we use percentages, because the numbers change depending on what we choose as our standard. If B is 3/4 of A, then a is 4/3 of B. Choose A as the standard, and B is 25% less. Choose B as the standard, and A is 33 1/3% more. Thus, if an item costing 100 units is put on sale for “25% less,”the price becomes 75. When the sale is over, and the item is marked back up, it must be marked up 33 1/3% to get the price up to 100. Those same figures appear in a recent study (3), which found a “25% decrease” in breast cancer rates among women who were breastfed as infants. Restated using breastfed health as the norm, there was a 33-1/3% increase in breast cancer rates among women who were artificially fed. Imagine the different impact those two statements would have on the public. Special. “Breastfeeding is a special relationship.” “Set up a special nursing corner.” In or family, special meals take extra time. Special occasions mean extra work. Special is nice, but it is complicated, it is not an ongoing part of life, and it is not something we want to do very often. For most women, nursing must fit easily into a busy life–and, of course, it does. “Special” is weaning advice, not breastfeeding advice. Breastfeeding is best; artificial milk is second best. Not according to the World Health Organization. Its hierarchy is: 1) breastfeeding; 2) the mother’s own milk expressed and given to her child some other way; 3) the milk of another human mother; and 4) artificial milk feeds (4). We need to keep this clear in our own minds and make it clear to others. “The next best thing to mother herself” comes from a breast, not from a can. The free sample perched so enticingly on the shelf at the doctor’s office is only the fourth best solution to breastfeeding problems. There is a need for standard formula in some situations. Only because we do not have human milk banks. The person who needs additional blood does not turn to a fourth-rate substitute; there are blood banks that provide human blood for human beings. He does not need to have a special illness to qualify. All he needs is a personal shortage of blood. Yet only those infants who cannot tolerate fourth best are privileged enough to receive third best. I wonder what will happen when a relatively inexpensive commercial blood is designed that carries a substantially higher health risk than donor blood. Who will be considered unimportant enough to receive it? When we find ourselves using artificial milk with a client, let’s remind her and her health care providers that banked human milk ought to be available. Milk banks are more likely to become part of our culture if they first become part of our language. We do not want to make bottlefeeding mothers feel guilty. Guilt is a concept that many women embrace automatically, even when they know that circumstances are truly beyond their control. (My mother has been known to apologize for the weather.) Women’s (nearly) automatic assumption of guilt is evident in their responses to this scenario: Suppose you have taken a class in aerodynamics. You have also seen pilots fly planes. Now, imagine that you are the passenger in a two-seat plane. The pilot has a heart attack, and it is up to you to fly the plane. You crash. Do you feel guilty? The males I asked responded, “No. Knowing about aerodynamics doesn’t mean you can fly an airplane.” “No, because I would have done my best.” “No. I might feel really bad about the plane and pilot, but I wouldn’t feel guilty.” “No. Planes are complicated to fly, even if you’ve seen someone do it.” What did the females say? “I wouldn’t feel guilty about the plane, but I might about the pilot because there was a slight chance that I could have managed to land that plane.” “Yes, because I’m very hard on myself about my mistakes. Feeling bad and feeling guilty are all mixed up for me.” “Yes, I mean, of course. I know I shouldn’t, but I probably would.” “Did I kill someone else? If I didn’t kill anyone else, then I don’t feel guilty.” Note the phrases “my mistakes,” “I know I shouldn’t,” and “Did I kill anyone?” for an event over which these women would have had no control! The mother who opts not to breastfeed, or who does not do so as long as she planned, is doing the best she can with the resources at hand. Shemay have had the standard “breast is best” spiel (the course in aerodynamics) and she may have seen a few mothers nursing at the mall (like watching the pilot on the plane’s overhead screen). That is clearly not enough information or training. But she may still feel guilty. She’s female. Most of us have seen well-informed mothers struggle unsuccessfully to establish breastfeeding, and turn to bottlefeeding with a sense of acceptance because they know they did their best. And we have seen less well-informed mothers later rage against a system that did not give them the resources they later discovered they needed. Help a mother who says she feels guilty to analyze her feelings, and you may uncover a very different emotion. Someone long ago handed these mothers the word “guilt.” It is the wrong word. Try this on: You have been crippled in a serious accident. Your physicians and physical therapists explain that learning to walk again would involve months of extremely painful and difficult work with no guarantee of success. They help you adjust to life in a wheelchair, and support you through the difficulties that result. Twenty years later, when your legs have withered beyond all hope, you meet someone whose accident matched your own. “It was difficult,” she says. “It was three months of sheer hell. But I’ve been walking every since.” Would you feel guilty? Women to whom I posed this scenario told me they would feel angry, betrayed, cheated. They would wish they could do it over with better information. They would feel regret for opportunities lost. Some of the women said they would feel guilty for not having sought out more opinions, for not having persevered in the absence of information and support. But gender-engendered guilt aside, we do not feel guilty about having been deprived of a pleasure. The mother who does not breastfeed impairs her own health, increases the difficulty and expense of infant and child rearing, an dismisses one of life’s most delightful relationships. She has lost something basic to her own well-being. What image of the satisfactions of breastfeeding do we convey when we use the word “guilt”? Let’s rephrase, using the words women themselves gave me: “We don’t want to make bottlefeeding mothers feel angry. We don’t want to make them feel betrayed. We don’t want to make them feel cheated.” Peel back the layered implications of “we don’t want to make them feel guilty,” and you will find a system trying to cover its own tracks. It is not trying to protect her. It is trying to protect itself. Let’s level with mothers, support them when breastfeeding doesn’t work, and help them move beyond this inaccurate and ineffective word. Pros and cons, advantages and disadvantages. Breastfeeding is a straight-forward health issue, not one of two equivlent choices. “One disadvantage of not smoking is that you are more likely to find secondhand smoke annoying. One advantage of smoking is that it can contribute to weight loss.” The real issue is differential morbidity and mortality. The rest–whether we are talking about tobacco or commercial baby milks–is just smoke. One maternity center uses a “balanced” approach on an “infant feeding preference card” (5) that lists odorless stools and a return of the uterus to its normal size on the five lines of breastfeeding advantages. (Does this mean the bottlefeeding mother’s uterus never returns to normal?) Leaking breasts and an inability to see how much the baby is getting are included on the four lines of disadvantages. A formula-feeding advantage is that some mothers find it “less inhibiting and embarrassing.” The maternity facility reported good acceptance by the pediatric medical staff and no marked change in the rates of breastfeeding or bottlefeeding. That is not surprising. The information is not substantially different from the “balanced” lists that the artificial milk salesmen have peddled for years. It is probably an even better sales pitch because it now carries very clear hospital endorsement. “Fully informed,” the mother now feels confident making a life-long health decision based on relative diaper smells and the amount of skin that shows during feedings. Why do the commercial baby milk companies offer pro and con lists that acknowledge some of their product’s shortcomings? Because any “balanced” approach that is presented in a heavily biased culture automatically supports the bias. If A and B are nearly equivalent, and if more than 90% of mothers ultimately choose B, as mothers in the United States do (according to an unpublished 1992 Mothers’ Survey by Ross Laboratories that indicated fewer than 10% of U.S. mothers nursing at a year), it makes sense to follow the majority. If there were an important difference, surely the health profession would make a point of not staying out of the decision-making process. It is the parents’ choice to make. True. But deliberately stepping out of the process implies that the “balanced” list was accurate. In a recent issue of Parenting magazine, a pediatrician comments, “When I first visit a new mother in the hospital, I ask, ‘Are you breastfeeding or bottlefeeding?’ If she says she is going to bottlefeed, I nod and move on to my next questions. Supporting new parents means supporting them in whatever choices they make; you don’t march in postpartum and tell someone she’s making a terrible mistake, depriving herself and her child.” (6) Yet if a woman announced to her doctor, midway through a routine physical examination, that she took up smoking a few days earlier, the physician would make sure she understood the hazards, reasoning that now was the easiest time for her to change her mind. It is hypocritical and irresponsible to take a clear position on smoking and “let parents decide” about breastfeeding without first making sure of their information base. Life choices are always the individual’s to make. That does not mean his or her information sources should be mute, nor that the parents who opt for bottlefeeding should be denied information that might prompt a different decision with a subsequent child. Breastfeeding. Most other mammals never even see their own milk, and I doubt that any other mammalian mother deliberately “feeds” her young by basing her nursing intervals on what she infers the baby’s hunger level to be. Nursing quiets her young and no doubt feels good. We are the only mammal that consciously uses nursing to transfer calories…and we’re the only mammal that has chronic trouble making that transfer. Women may say they “breastfed” for three months, but they usually say they “nursed” for three years. Easy, long-term breastfeeding involves forgetting about the “breast” and the “feeding” (and the duration, and the interval, and the transmission of the right nutrients in the right amounts, and the difference between nutritive and non-nutritive suckling needs, all of which form the focus of artificial milk pamphlets) and focusing instead on the relationship. Let’s all tell mothers that we hope they won’t “breastfeed”–that the real joys and satisfactions of the experience begin when they stop “breastfeeding” and start mothering at the breast. All of us within the profession want breastfeeding to be our biological reference point. We want it to be the cultural norm; we want human milk to be made available to all human babies, regardless of other circumstances. A vital first step toward achieving those goals is within immediate reach of every one of us. All we have to do is…watch our language. References
Copyright Kimberly Bobrow Jennery, 1997-2006 Contact Kimberly at: kimberly at bobrow dot net This is nothing to do with breastmilk being better than formula, I am just interested in peoples reasons for choosing (if they have a choice) how they feed their children. I have probably missed out loads of reasons but I am trying to keep them neutral, so that they could apply to both breastmilk and formula. I have not included ‘do you breastfeed or formula feed’ as a question as that is not the point of this poll. If you can think of any other things that might make you choose breastmilk or formula please let me know and I’ll add it to the list. You can vote on as many things as you like, you don’t need to choose just one answer. Lisa
e-mail: info@thebreastfeedingfestival.org.uk There are three ways to see our wonderful events programme for this year’s festival: * Full colour version with photos – if you have a colour printer this is a good one to download, print, and stick on as many noticeboards as possible – please spread the word! * Event-by-event text-only version – copy this into an e-mail and sent it to your friends, or add it to a newsletter or group e-mail * Day-by-day programme – the quickest way to see which events you might want to go to on any given day. Again, as this is only text, it is easy to put in an e-mail or add to a website. More details of the Breastfeeding Fair, The Madonna and Child Project (Kate Hansen), and the Big Breastfeeding Picture can be found by clicking on the relevant tabs on the left-hand menu If you would like to be kept up to date with our plans, keep checking here and our Facebook page. Press twisted my words, says academic in breast-milk row Mothers who do not breastfeed thought they had a new ally. But he was misinterpreted, he says By Susie Mesure Sunday, 2 August 2009 Few topics are more emotive than breastfeeding, that rite of passage into motherhood. Witness the furore that erupted over a story purporting to rubbish claims that breast milk provided newborns with a protective shield against an array of illnesses or allergies. Mums everywhere entrenched their positions on either side of the breast-milk divide when they leapt on the alleged assertion made by a leading professor of paediatrics and breastfeeding adviser to the World Health Organisation and Unicef. Michael Kramer was reported as saying that much of the evidence used to persuade mothers to breastfeed was either wrong or out of date. Those in the anti camp were particularly ecstatic. “It was all I could do not to dance around the room whooping with joy…. Thanks for vindicating all the mums who dared to challenge the sanctimonious breastfeeding orthodoxy in ‘discussion’ forums,” wrote TheJasMonster on Mumsnet after reading the article in The Times. Conversely, those pro-breastfeeding, from new mums trying to do the right thing to anti-formula campaigners such as Baby Milk Action, were left devastated that someone as respected as Kramer, who has studied evidence on breastfeeding since 1978, could perform such a massive U-turn. Especially on the eve of World Breastfeeding Week, which kicked off yesterday. Or did he? Not a bit of it, says the professor, who is renowned for a groundbreaking study that found an IQ advantage to breastfeeding even after you’d stripped out the natural advantages that being the sort of mum who breastfeeds would give her child. Rather, he is spitting tacks at how his comments had been so “grossly misrepresented” for the second time in almost as many months. (The first was in the respected American magazine, The Atlantic, in an article entitled “The case against breastfeeding”, which ignited the original media storm on the subject.) “Journalists certainly have the right to express their own opinions, but not to misquote experts they choose to interview in order to support those opinions. That sort of sensationalist journalist would not surprise me from the tabloids, but I had expected better from The Atlantic and The Times,” Kramer said last night. The Times quoted Kramer, who is based at McGill University, Montreal, as saying there was “very little evidence” breastfeeding reduces the risk of a range of diseases from leukaemia to heart disease. Yet, what he actually said was: “The existing evidence suggests that breastfeeding may protect against the risk of leukaemia, lymphoma, inflammatory bowel disease, type 1 diabetes, heart disease and blood pressure.” All he did concede was that we need “more and better studies to pursue these links”, a common cry from academics lacking in funding. As for the article merely casting him “in the camp that believes that breastfeeding will turn out to have a slight effect on brain development”, well, that hardly squared with his life’s work, he said yesterday. “There is an IQ advantage to breastfeeding by as much as three or four points. It’s not the difference between Einstein and a mental retard at an individual level, but it means having a smarter population on average, fewer children with school difficulties, and more gifted children.” He added: “There really isn’t any controversy about which mode of feeding is more beneficial for the baby and the mother, but when you read the article in The Times it sounds like there is.” Furthermore, he points out: “I’m not aware of any studies that have observed any health benefits of formula feeding. That’s important, and any mother weighing the benefits of breastfeeding vs formula feeding needs to know that.” His only note of caution, which was flipped on its head by both publications, was that breastfeeding advocates don’t need “to overstate their case for issues that are more controversial”, such as the link between breastfeeding and protection against obesity, allergies and asthma. “Public health bodies don’t have to exaggerate the benefits in order to be very comfortable about supporting breastfeeding,” he added. Some solace for campaigners such as the WHO, keen to use World Breastfeeding Week to increase global breastfeeding rates and save up to 1.3 million children’s lives a year. Worldwide, fewer than 40 per cent of mums breastfeed exclusively for the first six months of their baby’s life, as recommended: in the UK only 3 per cent are still breastfeeding exclusively at five months. http://www.hypnosisdownloads.com/pregnancy-childbirth/breastfeeding Relax about breastfeeding and help your baby feed – FREEDownload Breastfeeding Relaxation FREE – our support for Breastfeeding Week 2010Breastfeeding your baby is so healthy and is such an excellent start to ensuring he or she builds a good immune system. There are so many plus points for breastfeeding. But, of course, when you are the one doing it; breastfeeding can be difficult and tiring which is why having a powerful sense of the massive health benefits for your baby is going to be so valuable as a motivator. Hypnosis is an excellent tool for building positive intention and motivation. Mind, body and milk Your milk production and release is reliant on both physiological and psychological factors. Stress and the daily grind of looking after other children or continuing to work can effect your milk production. So how your mind is will affect how well your body works. Fortunately hypnosis is a great way of encouraging just the right breastfeeding mindset. There are many research studies indicating that breast fed baby’s are protected from a large array of childhood diseases and have better brain development. (1) It also seems that women who breast feed are at lower risk of breast cancer, ovarian cancer and even hip fractures in later life. So breastfeeding is a health win/win for you and your baby. Breastfeeding and relaxation Deep and regular relaxation means your system is going to be functioning closer to its best to ensure you are best placed to breast feed. Keeping a positive attitude is important as is feeling calm and relaxed during feeding. It’s totally understandable to sometimes have gloomy thoughts about being a mother because it is a lot of work. This is why it’s important to consider that you can be an excellent loving mother and sometimes feel resentful or ‘tied’ to your baby. It’s important to understand just the extent that relaxation and having the right unconsciously held mind set can help in your breast feeding. Hypnosis is the perfect way for you to instill a relaxed and comfortable association with feeding your baby. Click on the link at the bottom of this page to get the download for free until the end of World Breastfeeding Week on the 7th August 2010. Or you can buy it and donate the money to charity. http://www.hypnosisdownloads.com/pregnancy-childbirth/breastfeeding |
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