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Guest post: “Formula milk companies are getting in the way of parents’ decisions”

77 replies

MumsnetGuestPosts · 06/03/2018 10:26

#breastisbest, #fedisbest? Society seems intent on pitching mothers against each other, but there’s no need to take a side. Whether you breastfeed, bottle-feed, or mix-feed we know parents are simply doing their best. Working for Save the Children I see that first-hand from parents all over the world. Yet when it comes to feeding your baby, formula milk companies are getting in the way of parents’ decisions. They’re putting babies at risk by putting their profits first.

Last week Save the Children published Don’t Push It, revealing the scale of the formula milk industry’s aggressive marketing and calling on them to clean up their act. Six companies spend the equivalent of £36 on marketing for each baby born worldwide - amounting to £5 billion every year. Their marketing routinely violates a World Health Organisation code set up to stop aggressive marketing to new mums. Parents are bombarded with advertisements including false health claims and social media promotions, while doctors report receiving gifts and incentives to promote infant formula.

Why does this matter?

An estimated 823,000 child deaths would be prevented in low and middle-income countries each year if almost all babies were breastfed. That’s nearly one in seven of all deaths of children under the age of five, globally.

This is because breast milk is a baby’s first immunisation. It offers the antibodies a baby needs to survive lethal diseases like pneumonia, which kills more children under five than any other disease.

In situations where clean water isn’t available, mixing formula with dirty water can be dangerous and life-threatening. And when parents can’t afford enough product and have to dilute it, or don’t have access to safe preparation instructions, babies’ lives are also at risk.

What about mums who can’t breastfeed?

Our report does not deny that formula milk has a positive role to play in the right conditions. There is a recognised medical need for some infants to be formula-fed, and for several reasons it is a decision made by parents around the world.

We found that even where mums want to breastfeed they face pressure to choose formula. In Yangon, Myanmar we met La Min and her daughter San Sundari. She told us that she thought it wouldn’t be a problem if she didn’t breastfeed, because she could afford to buy formula. She made this decision after being told by the nurse that helped deliver her daughter that it would improve her baby’s IQ. So pervasive is the belief that artificial breast milk substitutes are better than the real thing in Myanmar’s healthcare system, that La Min even recalls doctors shouting at her when she decided to switch to breastfeeding instead.

What needs to change?

The time has come for companies to enter a race to the top to become the most ethical formula company, putting mothers’ and babies’ health as their priority and leading the way for others to follow suit.

We’re calling on:

  • companies to publicly commit to upholding the code and agree to meet targets set to achieve full compliance
  • investors of formula companies to consider their ethical investment policies and urge their formula companies to align with them
  • governments to adopt the code into legislation, as the evidence is clear that legislation is the strongest motivator for these industry giants to play fair

All involved in this industry must put babies before profit.

Hannah Greer, a Campaigner from Save the Children's International Development department will be responding to questions and comments on this post later this week.

Photo credit: Chloe White/Save the Children

OP posts:
reallyanotherone · 09/03/2018 07:40

Yes I’m aware of that. I would assume that most people wouldn’t freely chose to support a multimillion £ company that’s responsible for the deaths and ill health of infants in other countries though, if there were other companies to buy from.

Unfortunately, they would. If it was cheaper and/or they got their loyalty points, and a lot of the time because the suffering of people in other countries is an abstract concept, not a reality.

People can already boycott nestle, animal welfare - avoid battery eggs and intensively farmed meat. Do they? No.

I have argued on here for various ethical issues. Balloon releases is one that springs to mind- even though it is an act someone can directly control and not do, the response is usually fuck off, it’s for x reason/i’m grieving, and i can do what i like. What’s a few balloons anyway.

People think that their individual action/boycott is a tiny drop in a huge ocean, and makes no difference. So they may as well continue doing what is best for them, not for someone hundreds of miles away.

HannahatSavetheChildrenUK · 09/03/2018 13:13

@SeeKnievelHitThe17thBus

I've been boycotting Nestle now for 20+ years. It is so depressing that this is still an issue, but it's equally depressing that in 20+ years we still don't have decent access to drinking water in developing countries and that in many countries women are still diluting expensive formula in preference to breast feeding which would give their babies more advantages.

What else can non-formula feeders do to promote this though? cow and Gate won't give a mnokey's what I think as I don't buy their products.

Hi there,

It's great to hear of your activism on the issue.

You don't have to be a formula user, a person who breastfeeds or even a person with children to help put pressure on the companies. This issue is about unethical corporate behaviour, which anyone could and should object to.

The trouble is people aren't aware that it's still happening. So the best thing to do is spread the issue far and wide amongst your networks. You could also write to or call the companies, and continue to flood their social media pages.

Best wishes,

Hannah

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