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  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Peter1469 View Post
    In order to give your child a strong immune system, no woman who is healthy should forgo the natural method of feeding.
    You'll get no argument from me (.)(.)

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    Quote Originally Posted by Calypso Jones View Post
    where do we get the idea that women need instruction on breastfeeding? Classes?? reallY??
    Maybe oral instructions would be better.

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    Red face

    World Breastfeeding Week starts today...

    Breastfeeding rate hits 45.5 percent
    Mon, Aug 01, 2016 - ‘BABY-FRIENDLY HOSPITAL’: The Health Promotion Administration urged women to give birth at certified hospitals, of which there are 182 across the nation
    With World Breastfeeding Week starting today, the Health Promotion Administration yesterday said a survey it conducted showed the nation’s breastfeeding rate in the first six months of a baby’s life reached 45.5 percent, adding that there is still room for improvement in creating a breastfeeding-friendly environment. According to the agency’s statistics collected last year, Taiwan’s breastfeeding rate surpassed the world average rate of 38 percent and is getting closer to the WHO’s global target of increasing the rate of exclusive breastfeeding in the first six months up to at least 50 percent by 2025.

    The survey showed that 65.3 percent of breastfeeding mothers are satisfied with the general breastfeeding environment and 78.1 percent consider their workplace supportive of breastfeeding or pumping. Administration Director Wang Ying-wei said the survey also showed that 57.1 percent of mothers stopped breastfeeding because they did not have enough breast milk, while 21.9 percent said they had difficulty breastfeeding or pumping at their workplace. The survey showed that some people are not satisfied with the breastfeeding environment, so there is still room for improvement, the agency said.

    Breastfeeding is a natural and low-cost method of feeding infants and is good for their health, it said, adding that the World Alliance for Breastfeeding Action also said that breast milk is a nutritious and safer food for infants, adding that breastfeeding is friendlier to the ecosystem than formula feeding. It recommended exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months and introducing complementary foods with breastfeeding until the baby is two years old or older. Administration official Chen Miao-hsin said some studies have found that benefits of breastfeeding for infants include a reduced risk of developing ear infections, digestive tract and respiratory diseases, as well as diabetes or allergies.

    The administration said women should give birth at hospitals that have a “baby-friendly hospital” certification — of which there are 182 in the nation — so that they are allowed to have direct skin contact with their newborn within 30 minutes of giving birth and to stay in the same room as their baby for at least 24 hours, adding that healthcare practitioners can also instruct new mothers how to breastfeed. Wang said collective participation is needed to raise a baby, adding that in addition to the help of family members, society should support a breastfeeding and baby-friendly environment. Agencies provide various resources to help new parents, Wang said, adding that a toll-free hotline (0800-870-870) and a Web site (http://mammy.hpa.gov.tw) is available for pregnant women to ask questions or find information about pregnancy.

    http://www.taipeitimes.com/News/taiw.../01/2003652236

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    Red face

    Uncle Ferd all for it...

    UN Agencies Urge More Support, Funds for Breastfeeding
    August 02, 2017 : The World Health Organization and the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF) recommend that mothers breastfeed within the first hour after giving birth and continue until their children reach age 2, with supplemental food as they grow older. Yet no country in the world meets these standards or provides enough support for breastfeeding mothers, according to a report the agencies released Tuesday.
    "Breast milk works like a baby's first vaccine, protecting infants from potentially deadly diseases and giving them all the nourishment they need to survive and thrive," Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO director-general, said in a press release. Anthony Lake, executive director of UNICEF, posed this question on UNICEF's website: "What if governments had a proven, cost-effective way to save babies' lives, reduce rates of malnutrition, support children's health, increase educational attainment and grow productivity?"


    Lake provided the answer: "They do: It's called breastfeeding. And it is one of the best investments nations can make in the lives and futures of their youngest members — and in the long-term strength of their societies."[ According to the Global Breastfeeding Initiative, a partnership of 20 international agencies whose goal is to increase investment in breastfeeding worldwide under the leadership of UNICEF and WHO, breastfeeding can bolster brain development, which in turn can lead to a smarter, more productive work force.



    Mothers feed their babies in Paris, Oct. 11, 2008, during a worldwide breastfeeding event.



    Furthermore, breastfeeding saves mothers' and babies' lives. In the first six months of life, it helps prevent diarrhea and pneumonia, two major causes of infant death. Breastfeeding also reduces the risk of ovarian and breast cancer, two leading causes of death among women. The World Health Assembly, the decision-making body of the WHO, wants to see at least 50 percent of the world's children under 6 months of age exclusively breastfed by 2025. Reaching that target will require an investment of an additional $5.7 billion, or just $4.70 per newborn, for such things as improving breastfeeding practices in maternity facilities and improving access to lactation counseling — and it could generate $300 billion in economic gains across lower- and middle-income countries by 2025 and save 520,000 children's lives in the next 10 years, according to a World Bank study.


    Because nursing mothers need support from their families and communities, and governments worldwide need to implement policies such as paid maternity leave and nursing breaks, the U.N. agencies declared August 1-7 World Breastfeeding Week.


    https://www.voanews.com/a/united-nat...g/3969987.html
    See also:

    Study Suggests Moms Who Breast-feed Have Lower Risk of Heart Disease Later
    June 21, 2017 - A new study suggests a link between breast-feeding and a lowered risk of heart disease in older women.
    The research by Chinese investigators found that women who breast-fed may have lowered their risk of heart disease or stroke by an average of 10 percent when they became older. Researchers at the Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences, Peking University and the University of Oxford analyzed data on 289,573 women whose average age was 51. They found that those who breast-fed had a 9 percent lower risk of heart disease and an 8 percent decreased risk of stroke, compared with women who had never nursed. The benefit was even greater for women who breast-fed their babies for two years or more. Their heart disease risk was 18 percent lower and the risk of stroke 17 percent less.


    Jessica Ewald breast-feeds her 5-month-old son, Bennett, at her home in Oakbrook Terrace, Ill.

    Each additional month of breast-feeding was associated with a 4 percent and 3 percent lower risk of heart disease and stroke, respectively, researchers said. The findings of the study, the first to look at the long-term health benefits of breast-feeding for women, were published in the Journal of the American Heart Association.

    Hormone's possible role

    Cardiologist Nieca Goldberg, who was not involved in the study, said the cardiovascular benefits could have been related to the release of oxytocin during breast-feeding. "Oxytocin is a hormone that helps the flexibility of our blood vessels," she said. "And flexible blood vessels are resistant to the buildup of plaque or cholesterol in the walls of the arteries." Breast-feeding provides a number of benefits, such as conferring a mother's immune protection to her infant and protecting a newborn from life-threatening infections in countries with poor water quality.

    There are short-term benefits for mothers, too. Studies indicate that breast-feeding appears to reset the woman's metabolism after pregnancy, so she loses baby weight faster, while lowering her cholesterol, blood pressure and glucose levels. Goldberg, medical director at the Joan H. Tisch Center for Women's Health in New York, said it was possible that women in the study who breast-fed, and saw heart healthy benefits, might have also led healthier lifestyles compared with other women.

    Other strategies
    Related:

    UNICEF: Mother’s Milk Best For Newborn Babies
    August 01, 2016 — The United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) warns that 77 million babies deprived of mother’s milk within the first crucial hours after birth are at great risk of dying within a month. To mark World Breastfeeding Week (August 1 to 7), UNICEF and the World Health Organization (WHO) are calling for newborns to be breastfed exclusively for six months.
    UNICEF says newborns should be breastfed within the first hour of life. This provides them with the essential nutrients, antibodies and skin-to-skin contact with their mother that protects them from disease and death. UNICEF reports the longer breastfeeding is delayed, the higher the risk of death in the first month of life. It warns delaying breastfeeding by 24 or more hours after birth increases that risk to 80 percent. On the other hand, it notes more than 800,000 lives would be saved if all babies were fed nothing but mother’s milk from the moment they were born until six months of age.


    Women breastfeed babies during a mass event in Athens

    Unfortunately, the World Health Organization says this message is slow in getting through. WHO spokeswoman, Fadela Chaib, said new mothers are not receiving the support and encouragement they need to breast feed their babies. “The slogan this year is breastfeed anywhere, any time because it is also, as I said, the role of society to make this possible for mothers who want to breast feed. This being said, yes, it is an old problem. We have always been advocating for more breastfeeding because we are convinced of the benefit of breastfeeding. It is really the ideal food for infants,” said Chaib. For example, she said, breastfeeding protects children against many common illnesses. Breastfed children perform better on intelligence tests, are less likely to be overweight or obese and less prone to diabetes later in life.

    Chaib told VOA that inappropriate marketing of infant formula continues to undermine efforts to get women to breastfeed their babies. “We are not against them producing this kind of milk. What we are against is the fact that they promote it as if it is the same value that the milk of the mother. It is a lie. It is not the same,” said Chaib. Progress in getting more newborns breastfed within the first hour of life has been slow over the past 15 years. Surveys show in sub-Saharan Africa, where under-five mortality rates are the highest in the world, early breastfeeding rates have remained unchanged.

    https://www.voanews.com/a/mother-mil...s/3443776.html

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