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Infant feeding

Get advice and support with infant feeding from other users here.

"Breast is best" message under fire - and I agree, really

112 replies

hunkermunker · 22/02/2008 00:20

Interesting, I think

"Current promotional and educational programs which describe breastfeeding as 'best' are undermining women?s capacity to make informed decisions about infant feeding, according to an article published by a University of Wollongong doctoral student in the latest issue of Maternal and Child Nutrition.

Ms Nina Berry from UOW?s Centre for Health Initiatives was joint author of a report with Karleen Gribble from the University of Western Sydney called ?Breast is no longer best: promoting normal infant feeding?. Breastfeeding is not 'best', say the authors, it is simply the normal way to feed human infants.

The article suggested that breastfeeding promotion and education programs should abandon the ?breast is best? message because it is misleading and fails to communicate the importance of breastfeeding.

?In fact, these messages may have obscured the importance of breastfeeding to infant and maternal health and the well-established risks associated with early weaning from breastfeeding,? Ms Berry said. "To say that 'breast is best' is to suggest that what breastfeeding offers is a handful of optional bonuses and that formula-fed infants are the normal standard for comparison. In fact, human babies were designed to be fed human milk."

?Research has found that while most people accept that breastfed babies are healthier, they do not understand that this means that formula-fed babies are likely to be sicker. Because formula feeding is viewed as harmless, women are not getting the support they need to continue breastfeeding and to make informed choices about infant feeding. This misunderstanding demonstrates the failure of the ?breast is best? message and the need to rethink breastfeeding promotion?, she said.

The paper in Maternal and Child Nutrition also illuminates an important addition to the body of evidence pointing to the significance of using breastfed babies as the control group when conducting research.

The World Health Organisation (WHO)?s Multicenter Growth Reference study found that the growth of formula- fed babies deviated from that of breastfed babies and that using growth charts based on formula-fed babies could be contributing to the current obesity epidemic.

The use of formula-fed babies in control groups makes it difficult for readers to see that formula-fed babies are at increased risk of adverse health outcomes, Ms Berry said.

The WHO recommends that children are breastfed for up to two years or more and that they should not be given any food or drink other than breast milk for the first six months of their lives.

?It takes a great deal of support for mothers to reach these goals. However, mothers are not being provided with adequate support because the risks associated with early introduction of foods other than human milk are not well understood by health professionals. Furthermore, many health professionals are reluctant to talk to mothers about risks because they do not want to make mothers feel guilty. This is not about guilt. It is about a mother?s right to have all the information she needs to make an informed choice about how she should feed her baby ? it is about ensuring that mothers have the support they need,? Ms Berry said.

By Bernie Goldie"

OP posts:
OracleInaCoracle · 24/02/2008 09:05

bouncingturtle, its interesting that you say that about other peoples dp's discomfort at bf-ing. sil's friend bf her 2 dc's (one has severe cleft palate) and bil had to leave the room when she fed. both he and pil were the same when i was attempting to bf ds in hospital and it was a horrible feeling. i felt like a freak as well as a failure.

BabiesEverywhere · 24/02/2008 09:16

However the best cure for other peoples discomfort is discrete exposure.

When I started nursing my DD as a newborn, my father often left the room. I was very unsure about feeding outside my own house, I use to sit in my parent's living room with a boob tent on and my father in another room

But these days (18 months later) I feed DD without thinking and instead of scarping out of the room, my father can hold a decent conversation without a issue about the nursing.

Well, TBH both my parents think I should wean as I'm pregnant but they are happy for me to nurse in front of them now.

OracleInaCoracle · 24/02/2008 09:19

true, but the problem is getting to that point. if you are already struggling, have been given inaccurate or misleading information, and are already painfully aware that you are "failing" then being made to feel like a freak is just another nail in the coffin of your good intentions

BabiesEverywhere · 24/02/2008 09:26

I so agree, I felt terrible when my dad would leave the room and it did take months for me to feel more comfortable. Other people's poor attitudes to nursing, really take a toll on us new nursing mums

OracleInaCoracle · 24/02/2008 09:35

as ive said before, i was desperate to bf but couldnt and felt guilty about it for 2.5y. but i dont anymore. i feel sad about it, but there was nothing i could have done about it in the state i was in and im very aware that if i had had the support and correct information that i needed then things would have been very different.

yes ds was ff.and yes he is fine, but thats irrelevant.

loosey and sarah, please dont feel bad. threads like these arent meant to guilt-trip ff-ers, they are about ensuring that the next mother who struggles is given the best chance of succeeding and doesnt have to go through what you have.

Peachy · 24/02/2008 09:36

My Dad used to leave the room when DS1- the first grandchild- was botn. This baby will be their seventh and he really doesn't bat an eyelid any more LOL! (all but one- a NICU baby- breastfed)

OT)H its ahrder if you go visit- MIL used to demand I left the room and forced me to spend most of Christmas sat in a cold unheasted bedroom. We no longer have conta ct with her but I am certain it didn't help at the time.

OracleInaCoracle · 24/02/2008 09:38

peachy, how many weeks are you now?

VictorianSqualor · 24/02/2008 12:49

I'm trying to imagine how FiL will react to me BFing
Especially as we visit them rather than the other way round.
I do have a rather nice pashmina the same colour as my sling which I imagine will be used to spare some blushes.

Janni · 24/02/2008 12:58

My FIL really surprised me by how pro-BFing he was, particularly as his wife hadn't breastfed.
If you don't make a big deal of it they'll soon come to see it's just giving the baby some food. Nothing more, nothing less.

VictorianSqualor · 24/02/2008 13:02

My MiL and FiL are both great in many ways, and would definitely support me in breastfeeding I just know theyre quite reserved(?) and would find it a bit odd to see my breasts, don't think they'd say anything though.
Mind you MiL is going to be my birthing partner so she'll see a lot more than my boobs!

kiskideesameanoldmother · 24/02/2008 13:17

someone in the boondocks of Kentucky has figured out that bf is normal. I'm sure Glasgow Ky bears no resemblance to Glasgow, Scotland.

Peachy · 24/02/2008 15:47

Just a bit more then, VS LOL!

Lisie- 35 weeks. Not long to go now- I hope!

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