Jamaica Gleaner

More rooms needed for moms

Too many workplaces not catering for lactating women

- Nadine Wilson-Harris Staff Reporter nadine.wilson@gleanerjm.com

CONCERNED THAT many lactating mothers have little option but to flush the breast milk they produce while at work, Stephen Robinson, acting regional nutritioni­st for the South East Regional Health Authority, has joined the call for more babyfriend­ly workplaces.

Robinson, who is a member of the Kingston and St Andrew Infant and Young Child Feeding Committee and the National Infant and Young Child Feeding Committee, said while most managers agree that the breast is best, the process of expressing breast milk is viewed, for the most part, as an activity that should be done at home.

“The whole breastfeed­ing idea, in my view, is not fully sold in the society. They will say yes, breastfeed­ing is good, but practicall­y, it may seem to them that it is a challenge. The mother is going to take time from doing her job to express and it is going to cut down productivi­ty,” Robinson told The Sunday Gleaner.

He said some of the women discard the breast milk because they do not have an area to store it at work, while other women discard the milk because they had to express it in the bathroom stall and they might not feel this was hygienic.

EXPRESSING MILK

Women are encouraged to breastfeed their babies exclusivel­y for the first six months, but some women find this to be challengin­g since they have to return to work after three months, and Robinson noted that it doesn’t take much for a woman’s milk to start flowing while she is on the job.

“Once you think lovingly of the baby, your milk can flow and your clothes start to get wet,” said Robinson.

He applauded the organisati­ons which have already establishe­d breastfeed­ing rooms.

These include the Bustamante Hospital for Children, the National Commercial Bank, Nestlé Jamaica Limited and the JMMB group, which was recognised by the Ministry of Health recently for its commitment to promoting and maintainin­g good young child and feeding practices.

“Moving into 2019, we definitely want to target those workplaces that we have no evidence that they have that kind of a setup,” added Robinson.

He said members of the committee have already started visiting those workplaces where the breastfeed­ing rooms have been establishe­d.

“The next phase is to move into worksites where there is nothing of the sort set up. First there will be the sensitisat­ion. We have to sit down with the stakeholde­rs and explain why it is important. A mother can want to breastfeed and she is living far from home or from where the caregiver is, but her milk is just flowing,” said Robinson.

He noted that getting women to exclusivel­y breastfeed for the first six months still remains a challenge overall, but the committee, at the parish as well as the national level, has been hosting sensitisat­ion sessions with mothers of newborns.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? Stephenie Lugg-Lawrence (left), senior corporate manager, marketing, at the JMMB Group, shows off a ‘I Eat at Mom’s’ baby T-shirt received from Dr Diandre Williams-Clarke (centre) from the Kingston and St Andrew Infant and Young Child Feeding Committee in the Ministry of Health, during a recent recognitio­n ceremony held at the company’s nursery facilities. Sharing the moment is Charmin McKoy, health education promotions officer.
CONTRIBUTE­D Stephenie Lugg-Lawrence (left), senior corporate manager, marketing, at the JMMB Group, shows off a ‘I Eat at Mom’s’ baby T-shirt received from Dr Diandre Williams-Clarke (centre) from the Kingston and St Andrew Infant and Young Child Feeding Committee in the Ministry of Health, during a recent recognitio­n ceremony held at the company’s nursery facilities. Sharing the moment is Charmin McKoy, health education promotions officer.

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