Baby formula not substitute for breast milk -UNICEF, WHO warns

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By IJEOMA UKAZU

Baby food industry have been warned to end exploitative formula milk marketing much of which is in breach of international standards on infant feeding practices.

According to a new report by the United Nations Children’s Fund, UNICEF, and the World Health Organisation, WHO, revealed details of exploitative practices employed by $55 billion formula industry, which globally targets more than half of parents and pregnant women (51 percent) surveyed.

The report, “How marketing of formula milk influences our decisions on infant feeding”, draws on interviews with parents, pregnant women and health workers in eight countries – Bangladesh, China, Mexico, Morocco, Nigeria, South Africa, the United Kingdom and Viet Nam. It uncovers systematic and unethical marketing strategies used by the formula milk industry to influence parents’ infant feeding decisions.

The study finds that industry marketing techniques include unregulated and invasive online targeting; sponsored advice networks and helplines; promotions and free gifts; and practices to influence training and recommendations among health workers.

The messages that parents and health workers receive are often misleading, scientifically unsubstantiated, and violate the International Code of Marketing of Breast-milk Substitutes – a landmark public health agreement passed by the World Health Assembly in 1981 to protect mothers from aggressive marketing practices by the baby food industry.

According to the Director-General, WHO, Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, “This report shows very clearly that formula milk marketing remains unacceptably pervasive, misleading and aggressive. Regulations on exploitative marketing must be urgently adopted and enforced to protect children’s health.”

Health experts advised that breastfeeding remain an essential for achieving optimal child growth, development, and health.

In its recommendation, WHO and UNICEF state that children be initiated breastfeeding within the first hour of life, breastfeed exclusively for the first six months, and thereafter receive adequate and safe complementary foods while breastfeeding continues up to age two years or beyond.

The duo reeled out the benefits of exclusive breastfeeding for children to include; protection against infections and malocclusion; it is also associated with increase in intelligence quotient points in childhood, adolescence, and adulthood; and is likely to reduce the risk of overweight and diabetes.

For women who breastfeed their children exclusively, WHO said have a reduced risk of ovarian and breast cancer, adding that it also promotes spacing out births.

Although, some parents are unwilling or unable to breastfeed their children, breastfeeding is regarded as an essential component of optimal nurturing care for child health and development globally.

The World health body states that suboptimal breastfeeding is estimated to cause almost 600,000 annual child deaths from pneumonia and diarrhoea alone and the death of nearly 100,000 women from breast and ovarian cancer and type 2 diabetes.

Both UNICEF and WHO said that breastfeeding is more prevalent in low-income and middle-income countries than in high-income countries, being inversely associated with national gross domestic product. Within low-income and middle-income countries, continued breastfeeding at age one and two years is inversely associated with household socioeconomic status.

In an interview conducted by UNICEF, a mother resident in Lagos revealed that, “Advertisements will make me buy infant formula – I see a beautiful and chubby baby on TV, well fed and smiling and there is a container of milk there with all the nutritional facts on it, detailed.”

UNICEF, WHO new report further points that the effects of marketing in Nigeria are seen in recommendations from health professionals and on digital platforms, with companies using data-driven algorithms to target digital advertising to women whose online behaviour suggests they may be pregnant.

Digital influencers make regular posts about formula milk – including celebrities, pediatricians, so-called experts and ‘mom influencers.’
According to WHO, such products include any milk in either liquid or powder form that are marketed specifically to feed children aged up to three years, including infant or standard (age 0–6 months), follow-up (7–12 months), and toddler (13–36 months) formula.

The Executive Director, UNICEF, Catherine Russell adds that those marketing messages are “False and misleading messages about formula feeding and are a substantial barrier to breastfeeding, which we know is best for babies and mothers.

“We need robust policies, legislation and investments in breastfeeding to ensure that women are protected from unethical marketing practices and have access to the information and support they need to raise their families.”

In Nigeria, 73 percent of women expressed a strong desire to breastfeed exclusively. Yet the report details how a sustained flow of misleading marketing messages across countries is reinforcing myths about breastfeeding and breast milk, and undermining women’s confidence in their ability to breastfeed successfully.

These myths include the necessity of formula in the first days after birth, the inadequacy of breast milk for infant nutrition, that specific infant formula ingredients are proven to improve child development or immunity, the perception that formula keeps infants fuller for longer, and that the quality of breast milk declines with time.

Breastfeeding within the first hour of birth, followed by exclusive breastfeeding for six months and continued breastfeeding for up to two years or beyond, offers a powerful line of defense against all forms of child malnutrition, including wasting and obesity.

The UN agency said, breastfeeding also acts as babies’ first vaccine, protecting them against many common childhood illnesses. It also reduces women’s future risk of diabetes, obesity and some forms of cancer.

Yet, in Nigeria, only 29 percent of babies are exclusively breastfed, according to the 2018 National Demographic and Health Survey. The Nigerian Government aims to increase the exclusive breastfeeding rate to 65 percent by 2025.

Alarmingly, health professionals’ recommendations to use formula milk were common across the surveyed countries, particularly post-partum. In Nigeria, 45 percent of post-partum women had received a recommendation from a health professional to feed formula product – the second highest of the countries surveyed, after Bangladesh (57 percent).

Health professionals in Nigeria reported that contact with formula milk companies was extremely common in public and private health care settings.

In Nigeria, where women ranked health professionals as their most important source of feeding advice, over one third of surveyed pregnant women said they received a recommendation to formula feed by a health professional.

To address these challenges, WHO, UNICEF and partners are calling on governments, health workers, and the baby food industry to end exploitative formula milk marketing and fully implement and abide by the Code requirements. This includes: “Passing, monitoring and enforcing laws to prevent the promotion of formula milk, in line with the International Code, including prohibiting nutrition and health claims made by the formula milk industry.

“Investing in policies and programmes to support breastfeeding, including adequate paid parental leave in line with international standards, and ensuring high quality breastfeeding support; Requesting industry to publicly commit to full compliance with the Code and subsequent World Health Assembly resolutions globally; Banning health workers from accepting sponsorship from companies that market foods for infants and young children for scholarships, awards, grants, meetings, or events.

An analysis showed that between 2005 and 2019, world total formula sales grew by 121·5 percent with further increases of 10·8 percent projected by 2024.

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