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U.S. Opposition to Breast-Feeding Resolution Stuns World Health Officials

If the mother can't provide enough nutrition for the child nowhere it said we must made her exclusive gave the child her own milk.

How much of formula advertisements you see is about special formula and how much is designed to advertise formula for healthy child.
How much of those advertisement are designed to make the mother feel guilty if she won't give that brand of formula to her child
This is about choice. When the UN speaks, the World Health Organization (WHO) follows and as the slate.com article pointed out, WHO can be very compelling even when it is wrong.

https://slate.com/technology/2018/07/whos-breastfeeding-resolution-really-is-flawed.html
...which mandates, among many other requirements, that formula in such hospitals be kept “out of sight unless in use” and that hospitals “provide parents with written and verbal information about breastfeeding.”
When it comes to our bodies, denial of information is the same as denial of access.

Ultimately, what the US say is irrelevant. No advertisers can force any woman to chose one way or the other. But advertisers are not WHO, an organization that supposedly have the stamp of international approval and a halo of righteousness and flawlessness that make it difficult to resist.

So if WHO starts telling Iran on how to run one half of the people -- women -- would you approve?

This is nothing more than a troll thread.
 
This is about choice. When the UN speaks, the World Health Organization (WHO) follows and as the slate.com article pointed out, WHO can be very compelling even when it is wrong.

https://slate.com/technology/2018/07/whos-breastfeeding-resolution-really-is-flawed.html

When it comes to our bodies, denial of information is the same as denial of access.

Ultimately, what the US say is irrelevant. No advertisers can force any woman to chose one way or the other. But advertisers are not WHO, an organization that supposedly have the stamp of international approval and a halo of righteousness and flawlessness that make it difficult to resist.

So if WHO starts telling Iran on how to run one half of the people -- women -- would you approve?

This is nothing more than a troll thread.
Well as a General Practitioner I agree with WHO .
About power of advertisement then you are wrong . the pressure they put on their target audience can really be crushing.
Also who says the mother won't get information about formula . they get a lot of it in society and if their child need it also they hospital and doctors there gave her more than enough information .

Also you are worried about this
which mandates, among many other requirements, that formula in such hospitals be kept “out of sight unless in use” and that hospitals “provide parents with written and verbal information about breastfeeding.”
Why it must be so worrying if hospitals provide information about breastfeeding while every evidence point that its better for the child and mother both.

By the way if a hospitals want to get mother and child friend certificate they already must have implemented those guidelines.and I still didn't see any place in mandate that say information about formula must be withheld from mothers.
 
US doesnt compel any body to adopt formula milk. Some women do this because they cant produce milk themselves.
I see this step by USA 100% logical.
 
About power of advertisement then you are wrong . the pressure they put on their target audience can really be crushing.
And I disagree. Advertisers have only as much 'power' as you can give them. I refuse to be paternalistic. I hold people accountable for their decisions and actions. So do you as a GP. You cannot force someone to change his lifestyle -- such as smoking -- even when you have all the medical literature behind you.

Also who says the mother won't get information about formula . they get a lot of it in society and if their child need it also they hospital and doctors there gave her more than enough information .
Then why must the UN got involved? No one is disputing that natural milk is better than formula, but as a GP, have you ever wondered why formula milk came to be in the first place?

Again...This is nothing more than a troll thread, and you know it.
 
How formula milk firms target mothers who can least afford it


Guardian/Save the Children investigation in deprived areas of Philippines finds companies flouting international code


Trixia, 19, bottle feeds her four month-old daughter near her home in a deprived community in Navotas, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children
Formula milk companies are continuing to use aggressive, clandestine and often illegal methods to target mothers in the poorest parts of the world to encourage them to choose powdered milk over breastfeeding, a new investigation shows.

A Guardian/Save the Children investigation in some of the most deprived areas of the Philippines found that Nestlé and three other companies were offering doctors, midwives and local health workers free trips to lavish conferences, meals, tickets to shows and the cinema and even gambling chips, earning their loyalty. This is a clear violation of Philippine law.

Representatives from Nestlé, Abbott, Mead Johnson and Wyeth (now owned by Nestlé) were described as a constant presence in hospitals in the Philippines, where only 34% of mothers exclusively breastfeed in the first six months. Here, they reportedly hand out “infant nutrition” pamphlets to mothers, which appear to be medical advice but in fact recommend specific formula brands and sometimes have money-off coupons.

Hospital staff were also found to be recommending specific formula brands in lists of “essential purchases” handed to new mothers. Targeted advertising on Facebook and partnerships with influential “mummy bloggers” means mothers are being exposed to more unregulated formula promotion than ever before.


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Jovelyn, 32, bottle feeds her five month-old baby JM in her home and shop in Caloocan City, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children

At the same time, powerful lobby groups have been working to curtail government legislation regulating formula marketing and promotion, in the Philippines and across the world.

All companies have rejected the allegations and denied any wrongdoing.

‘Formula is expensive … I only gave her half bottles’
Mothers living in the ramshackle neighbourhoods of Metro Manila spoke of spending three-quarters of their income on formula milk, often forgoing food themselves.

TV advertising campaigns for follow-on milk by brands such as Bonna – which portray the “Bonna kid” as one who is smarter and succeeds in life – convinced them, they said, that bottle feeding is not only as good for the baby’s health as breast milk but will bolster their IQ and future prospects. Store displays of formula were splashed with claims such as “clinically proven to give the IQ + EQ advantage”. For mothers living in poverty, such aspirational marketing is particularly seductive.


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Jessica, 24 and Trista, 2 stand in their neighbours home in a Malabon City, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children
Sitting in her neighbour’s kitchen in Malabon, one of the most deprived areas of Manila, Jessica Icawat, 24, wept as she recalled the sacrifices she had made to give Trista, her two-year-old daughter, Nestogen, a formula made by Nestlé. Breastfeeding had been hard and she turned to formula because the local community consensus was it is “fine, the same as breast milk”.

Stick thin, her cheek and collarbones sticking out, Icawat was visibly malnourished, as was Trista, whose swollen stomach stuck out beneath a faded pink Little Mermaid T-shirt. The average cost of Nestogen is 2,000 pesos (£28) a month but Icawat could afford to spend only 800 pesos.


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Midwife Grace Chelo Amarez with patients Jessica, 24, 2 year-old Trista, 6 year-old Zaira and 3 year-old Vanessa in a deprived area of Malabon City, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children
“My baby has been sick: she was admitted to the hospital three times with diarrhoea and asthma.”

The World Health Organisation’s international code explicitly prevents formula companies directly targeting mothers and healthcare professionals, and restricts advertising. Formula promotion is a particular issue in poorer countries because there is a higher risk of pneumonia and diarrhoea for babies, and with a lack of access to healthcare mothers are less informed about the benefits of breastfeeding.

Targeted tactics towards mothers and midwives directly violate the laws of the Philippines as well as the internationally recognised code. This was drawn up in 1981 after widespread protest against Nestlé’s marketing of formula as better than breastmilk, despite evidence that formula feeding was linked to babies falling ill or dying from poorly sterilised bottles.

Yet despite the industry’s claims it has cleaned up its act, the practices that were globally condemned four decades ago are still evident today across the developing world. The report by Save the Children says companies are systematically violating the milk code, with devastating consequences for infant health and mortality. Leading formula companies spend £36 on marketing for every baby born worldwide. East Asia, with its growing economies and high birth rate, is a key target.

‘A clandestine approach’
“The milk formula companies now take a clandestine approach,” said Dr Amado Parawan, who has spent 20 years working with Save the Children in the Philippines to champion breastfeeding.


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Formula for Trista, 2, set up in the home of Jessica, 24 in Malabon City, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children


“On the face of it they have improved. But really they are skirting around the milk code by doing visits and dinners for midwives and doctors outside of office hours, in the evenings.”

Julianne Bores, a GlaxoSmithKline representative who worked alongside formula representatives in hospitals since 2009, described a culture of financial dependency, where if doctors want to go to expensive medical conferences – held mostly in lavish hotels or abroad - they would always ask the milk companies for sponsorship, and were occasionally allowed to bring their spouses. Formula representatives would also pay for “rest and recreation activities” for doctors and their families, such as tickets to Cirque du Soleil, and meals at popular restaurants.

Bores was also an observer of the “parenting” and “nutrition” forums for parents held in the hospital canteens by the formula representatives, where samples or branded freebies like umbrellas and feeding bottles would be distributed. All these practices are a violation of Philippine law.



While formula can be necessary as not every woman chooses or is able to breastfeed, the barrage of marketing, advertising on TV and social media, and persuasive free gifts ensures that misinformation is rife.

’They would give us so many free samples’
At a health centre in Malabon, midwife Grace Shelo Almarez admits that before she was given training, she was among the many wined and dined by Nestlé, Mead Johnson and Wyeth and offered numerous trips to conferences. As recently as October Nestlé offered her a trip to Iloilo, which she declined.


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Children play in a deprived community in Navotas, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children


The Save the Children report shows how global pro-formula campaigning is. In Mexico, where just 31% of infants are exclusively breastfed for the first six months, 50% of mothers said they had been recommended formula by their doctor, while in Chile, 75% of doctors, nurses and midwives in hospitals reported visits from formula representatives.

In statements to the Guardian, all companies denied any wrongdoing. However, both Nestlé and Mead Johnson defended funding conference trips for doctors, even though the Department of Health confirmed it was illegal in the Philippines.

Nestlé said it would “investigate all the reported actions” and “will take fast and decisive action if any wrongdoing is found”.

“This picture does not represent Nestlé’s culture and business practices,” the statement added. “The first and most fundamental expression of our respect for mothers and babies is support for breastfeeding and compliance with the law and our own strict procedures. Nestlé strongly rejects the allegation that it does not comply with its legal obligations and the WHO code as implemented in national law.”

Abbott told the Guardian it was “committed to the ethical marketing of our products in compliance with the laws and regulations of the countries in which we do business,” and added: “The behaviour you have described is not in line with our policies. We take all reports of non-compliance seriously.”


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Felicidad prepares formula in her neice’s home for grandson Dashiell in Caloocan city, Metro Manila, the Philippines. Photograph: Hanna Adcock/Save the Children
Mead Johnson said it had ”not received notification of the violations you mention. Any reports received by Mead Johnson are investigated according to the facts and information, per our rigorous compliance programme.


“We take great care to fully comply with all established laws and regulations that govern the manufacturing, distribution and marketing of all our products. Acting responsibly is core to our purpose.”

‘I don’t know if we are winning’




For those on the ground advocating for the benefits of breastfeeding, the pressures from above and below could make it seem like a Sisyphean task.

Asked if he thought they were winning the battle for breastmilk, Parawan laughed, though a little dejectedly. “I don’t know if we are winning,” he said. “But we are not going to stop fighting. I have to believe there is light at the end of the tunnel.”

https://www.theguardian.com/lifeand...k-companies-target-poor-mothers-breastfeeding

the US gov is known for serving the interests of greedy corporates

at least find something that is published in this century..
 
at least find something that is published in this century..
In 3rd World countries where women's health are already poor, mothers instinctively know their milk are often inadequate. At times when a mother cannot nurse her baby, the alternative is a mixture of cereal gruel of sugared water and milled rice or mashed fruit.

But of course, YOU would rather have those 3rd World mothers and their babies suffers just so YOU can satisfy your hatred for US.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/women/m...-formula-milk-arent-the-end-of-the-world.html

This information is essential in Third World countries, where babies die because mothers are pressurised into feeding them harmful alternatives, like coffee, ash, sugared water, if they can’t produce enough milk themselves.

But formula milk is eeeeevil...
 
And I disagree. Advertisers have only as much 'power' as you can give them. I refuse to be paternalistic. I hold people accountable for their decisions and actions. So do you as a GP. You cannot force someone to change his lifestyle -- such as smoking -- even when you have all the medical literature behind you.


Then why must the UN got involved? No one is disputing that natural milk is better than formula, but as a GP, have you ever wondered why formula milk came to be in the first place?

Again...This is nothing more than a troll thread, and you know it.
at the first there was a need and formula milk was an answer to that but then it become business and we have 60s-70s and the advertisement that came with it that turned it to a multi-billion dollar industry . then it become a sign of progression they hammered it into mothers head its better for your child and its a sign of progression if you gave it to your child .
and let look at some old formula advertisement which were just as we say misleading advertisement and by today standards in some place even criminal. I wonder why nobody to try to soo formula factories just like what they did with cigar factories.
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may i ask you something , why regulate Cigar Advertisement if as you say advertisement is not that effective ?
just look at some misleading advertisement that compare formula with breast milk
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and not only make false advertisement of it is comparable to breast milk , then gave free can to each mother . its the certain recipe that newborn wont take its mother breast anymore as drinking from a bottle is many times easier than drinking from mother breast
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Finally...A couple of MEN from a culture that oppresses women is criticizing

We elected Women prime mister twice.................. how many times have you done that?...........NEVER, by choice, Come back and give us the lecture on culture and freedom, when you actually have culture......until then I suggest take your formula milk and zip it.
 
Nestlé (the largest infant formula company in the world by far) is a Swiss company folks not American. So yes they have gotten in trouble pushing infant formula in countries with poor water quality and I wouldn’t be surprised if they have large advertising campaigns.
 
at the first there was a need and formula milk was an answer to that but then it become business and we have 60s-70s and the advertisement that came with it that turned it to a multi-billion dollar industry . then it become a sign of progression they hammered it into mothers head its better for your child and its a sign of progression if you gave it to your child .
and let look at some old formula advertisement which were just as we say misleading advertisement and by today standards in some place even criminal. I wonder why nobody to try to soo formula factories just like what they did with cigar factories.
Ban it. Simple solution. Nowhere have I ever advocated force feeding formula milk to anyone. Am only saying give mothers an alternative. But if you think the product is that evil -- ban it. Simple as that.

Again...This is nothing more than a troll thread.
 
And bringing breast feeding to the UN is not? You want to nurse your baby? Do so. Formula? Your choice. Not every woman is capable of nursing her baby, so formula is an alternative. Or are you MEN telling everyone that it is easy for women to nurse? The UN resolution is about discouraging the use of formula. And we objected. But our objection does not equate to the harsh language like we 'oppose' breastfeeding.

Finally...A couple of MEN from a culture that oppresses women is criticizing US about breastfeeding. Get a grip on yourselves. :rolleyes:

if the UN resolution is about discouraging the use of formula, when possible for the woman,
then it's probably because formula baby food sucks.

to try to protect formula producers from UN resolutions,
instead of for instance allowing the UN resolution to pass and at the same time subsidizing baby formula improvements,
is to protect the financial interests of big business instead of the public.

the world is right to cry foul when financial interests are protected by any government let alone the still leading US government instead of the public's interests, especially when it comes to something as important as the quality of artificial baby-food.
 
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